Read Kat: Breaking Pointe Online
Authors: Sebastian Scott
The short version of the first day of term break goes a little something like this: I'm in Anne's office, dressed in a bulbous chicken suit and tap shoes.
âThere I was,' I tell Anne, âtapping my little heart out, driving customers inside. And then this little kid started kicking me in the shins. And I â¦'
âKicked him back?' she asks, in her usual no-nonsense tone. I have a feeling she has heard some version of this story before.
I nod and Anne takes it in her stride. She flips to the next page in her notebook.
âSo we move on from promotional work. I have an audition, which you're entirely wrong for. Too short, too inexperienced, but what do we say about rejection?'
âIt's character building.'
Anne smiles and hands me the details of the audition.
âThe Moulin Rouge?' I read
âThey always audition in Sydney. We grow longer legs here for some reason.'
âBut I couldn't live in Paris. My friends are here.'
âYou're right. What a horrific concept,' Anne says, deadpan.
I look back down at the sheet. The Moulin Rouge? I used to do the cancan in Tash's heels when I was a kid. (Tash hates anything lowbrow,
quelle surprise!
) There was no harm in auditioning, was there? Anne had already pointed out I was entirely wrong for it. So really I've got nothing to lose.
Â
I hand in my chicken costume and head down to the Academy to find Ethan and tell him about the audition. He's spending a lot of time there lately, working on his choreography with Abigail. If it wasn't, you know,
Abigail
I might think something was going on. I'm walking down the corridor, when I spot Tara ahead. She's standing looking out the
window and her face is sad. Everything comes flooding back. The kiss. The guilt.
I spin on my heel and find myself face to face with Christian.
âHey,' he says, his eyes full of trouble and pain, which I am used to seeing on account of Tara. I realise this time it is for me.
I don't know how to deal with his guilt, I can't even face my own. âHi,' I say after an awkward pause.
Ethan appears. âHey, Kitty-kat. Sell many nuggets?'
I give Christian a weak smile and hurry to walk alongside Ethan. âI'm starting to think croissants might be more my thing.'
Â
And why not Paris? What do I have to stay for? Christian and Tara? Abigail? Ethan will go the way of the Karamakov clan eventually â Sydney isn't big enough for his ambition. I know he's got his eye on some experimental dance group in Barcelona. Ben comes with his own problems and as much as I love Sammy, I can't stay in Sydney just for him. I imagine
the Moulin Rouge would pay pretty well. I'd have enough money to help pay Sammy's fees, maybe even to fly Sammy and Tara to Paris to see me. We'd still be friends, just from a distance. There's still Stalkbook and Fritter and even ye olde email.
But then I picture saying goodbye to Christian and I can't. I think about the world of pain we live in now and double it, triple it, and I still can't imagine what it would be like to get on that plane, and leave him behind.
Â
Anne is right, they do grow long legs in Sydney. By far I am the youngest â and shortest â at the audition. I fill in the form and take a number as a woman named April introduces herself and explains that she'll be leading us through the audition.
We line up in rows. Wearing the number fourteen pinned to my leotard, I dance in the back of the group, barely seen among the glamazons, even in my sparkly high heels. I teeter on them, a little unstable.
âYour sole purpose in life is to get your leg up as quickly as possible and then down as quickly
as possible,' April calls as we dance relentlessly through the routine.
One girl smiles, taking April's words as a challenge and kicks her leg super high. But she forgets to turn her head and kicks herself in the face. She yelps with pain, running off the stage. I wince with sympathy.
âPoints for flexibility, though,' I call out.
April hands her a tissue. Then she looks me over, as if noticing me for the first time. She calls out, âYou, shorty, to the front so I can see you.'
I run quickly to the front row and keep dancing. I am actually loving this. It's fast and fun and furious. It's sexy and bawdy and a little bit naughty.
We kick and spin and as the music comes to an end we slide down into a split and shake our skirts in the air.
âRight, who wants to go again?' April asks.
The other girls groan. I raise my hand, exhilarated. And then lower it again. âAh. You were joking. Got it.'
April smiles. âSo, get ready for some happy slash sad news. If I call your number, please come back tomorrow for an interview so we can decide if you're a psycho. The rest, you're probably lovely, but you're not going to Paris with us.'
Suddenly I want to go to Paris so badly.
âNumber twelve, six, legs eleven and â¦' All the girls hold their breath.
Pleasepleasepleasepleasepleasepleaseplease.
âShorty fourteen.'
âYes!' I literally jump for joy.
Â
I spend the next day researching the Moulin Rouge.
âWow, you really want this,' Ethan says.
And I do. But the idea of the interview fills me with panic. What can I tell them about myself? That I failed at the Academy? That I'm the black sheep of my famous dancing family?
âIs this where I tell you to be yourself?' asks Ethan.
âNo,' I moan. âMyself is bad. That's when they find out I'm a serial failure and dance fraud.'
The worst thing is, the more I read about the Moulin Rouge, the more I want the job. There's something about the tradition of it that I find fascinating. It's a place where artists, workers, society ladies, businessmen and foreigners all hang out together, where labels don't matter, a place of costumes, theatrics, beauty and fun.
The interview set-up is intense. It's me, April and a panel of interviewers. They all stare at me, weighing my every answer. I am petrified. I mean this is me, right? Serial failure, dance fraud. Ethan told me to be myself, but which self am I supposed to be?
April speaks gently, firmly. âAt the Moulin you do two shows a night, almost every day of the year. It's hard and not as glamorous as you'd think. Why would you want to move to the other side of the world to do that?'
âLast week I kissed my best friend's ex-boyfriend. Seems like the right time to get away.'
April looks disappointed in me. I close my eyes and try again, digging deeper into myself than I'm usually prepared to go.
âBut when I read about the Moulin Rouge, it felt like me. It's cheeky and fun, and for a hundred years people have been going there to lose themselves. To be someone else for a night.' For a moment I forget about the rest of the panel and speak directly and honestly to April. âI think I could be good at this and I kind of never think that.'
April smiles.
Â
Sammy's Grandpa Morrie dies. We all go to the funeral to support Sammy. I watch on as they lower the coffin into the ground. Life is really short, I think. I hold Tara's hand. I didn't know Grandpa Morrie, but tears fall anyway, for Sammy and his family and the sadness they must bear. Seeing Sammy and his dad standing together I wonder if good things can come out of grief and loss, if Sammy can find a way back to his family.
On the way home from the funeral I get the text I've been waiting for. I'm in the
Moulin Rouge
. I'm going to Paris!
I ring Mum that night.
âThe Moulin Rouge?' she repeats. I think I've woken her up.
âI know it's not the
Ballet de l'Opéra de Paris
, but I thought you'd be happy.'
âI
am
happy,' Tash says. She doesn't sound
exactly
happy. âI'm also a little confused. I thought you didn't want to be a dancer. I was coming to terms with that.'
âThis is different, Mum. It's not like ballet. It's fun. It doesn't take itself too seriously.'
âAll professional dance is serious, Katrina.'
I sigh impatiently. âI know that.'
âAnd you're sure this is what you want?'
âYes.'
âWell,' she contemplates. âParis
is
closer to Berlin than Sydney. And flights are so cheap here. I could fly in for visits and make sure you're â¦'
âBehaving?'
âI was going to say looking after yourself. Oh, Kat, I'm so glad you're dancing again.'
This time I don't roll my eyes. âMe too, Mum,' I say. I'm actually kind of looking forward to seeing her in Paris.
I've travelled all my life, from one country to another. I've lost track of time zones, mixed up my
Bonjours
with my
Kalasperas
. I've looked out of hotel windows at city lights and not known what city, what country I'm in. My passport is stamped with places I don't recall being in.
Maybe I sound spoilt and ungrateful, but on all those trips I longed for home. For vegemite sandwiches and gum trees, barbecued sausages and Christmas in summer, for Moreton Bay fig trees and fruit bats and possums in the park.
It's not like I was a tourist. I was little more than luggage, dragged around by Tash and Sebastian. Once in Singapore, Tash went straight from the theatre to the airport and flew out, forgetting I was
waiting for her in the hotel. It was only discovered because the babysitter wanted to go home.
But it's different this time. I am choosing Paris, and Paris is choosing me. In Paris I can be anyone I want, maybe I'll even choose a stage name and leave the Karamakov name behind. No one has to know about my famous parents, or that I failed the National Academy of Dance, or that I might be flunking out of Normal School. No one has to know that I am a kisser of my best friend's ex-boyfriend. In Paris I can start again. I can be the real me.
Even better, I can be the Paris version of the real me. Who I imagine is a bit like the real Sydney me, but much better dressed.
âIt's hard enough not having you at the Academy,' Tara says, hugging me. âI am incapable of an ocean of distance.'
âFear not, little one,' I tell her. âYou still have two weeks to adore me.'
Ben and Christian offer to accompany me to my first rehearsals (out of the goodness of their hearts, I'm sure). I am relieved to have Ben around, the intensity of my feelings for Christian have only heightened since our illicit kiss. I spend way too much time imagining farewell scenes (I've been
hanging out with Tara the hopeless romantic too long), or reunion scenes in Paris, walking along the Seine, the Eiffel tower looming in the background. Argh. PAUSE. STOP. DELETE.
âYou can't stay,' I warn them.
Ben pouts. âFirst you reject me and now you're leaving me. You owe me girls in feathers, Karamakov.'
We walk into the busy backstage area. âThank you, boys, but this is as far as you go. I'm not bringing an entourage to my first day of rehearsal.'
âWhy are you rehearsing here anyway?' Christian asks, a little sulkily.
April overhears and answers Christian's question.
âBecause half our dancers are Australian. We rehearse them here and then ship them over.' She looks at Ben and Christian, questioningly. âAnd you are?'
Christian goes to shake April's hand but I pat it away.
âSorry, April. Academy students. Begged for a field trip.'
âWe'll be like ninjas,' Ben promises me. âQuiet and you won't see us.'
April says nothing, and I take her silence to be consent. She rifles through a rack of costumes.
She pulls out a ruffled skirt and hands it to me. â
Pour vous.
See you out there.'
I squeak and show the skirt to Christian and Ben. âThis is mine. See, that's my name.'
âI thought the skirts would be shorter,' Ben says, disappointed.
Â
April introduces me to Jade. âShe's a Moulin veteran. Watch closely but ignore everything she says.'
I sit down beside Jade who is lying on her side, languidly stretching her legs above her head.
âHi,' I say, thinking this might be like Lexie and the plastics all over again. But Jade smiles, surprisingly friendly.
âWelcome to the family,' she says.
We're walked through the routines. When the music starts, I dance, trying to follow Jade, but I'm struggling to keep up. April watches from the audience and the boys sit a few rows behind, scoffing chips. I don't have to try and forget that they're there â the rehearsal is the audition on steroids. We don't stop moving for a second, kicking and spinning and cartwheeling our way around the stage.
âAnd cartwheel,' April calls. â
Cartwheel.
' Everything she shouts seems to be for my benefit.
âKat, we need you to get there on three. On three.'
I race across the stage, at frantic speed.
Ben whistles. âThunder Kats are go!' he calls.
âI thought you were going to be ninjas,' April snaps, then turns back to me. âAnd that was on five again.'
âSorry, April. I'll get faster.'
I push myself as hard as I can. I hold Jade around the waist. We hop around with our legs extended high in second position. Jade whispers the counts to me. We weave around each other, and I end up in the right spot, but I'm taken by surprise as everyone goes down on the floor in the splits. I slide slowly down. âSorry,' I call again. April nods, but her face looks tight and worried. I know that look. I've seen that look on dance teachers' faces all over the world. But usually I only get that look when I'm deliberately goofing off. This time I'm trying my hardest to keep up. A seed of doubt germinates. What if my best isn't good enough?
Â
Post-rehearsal, Jade and I straggle out behind the other dancers. I'm wincing, hobbling like an old lady.
âTalia's got this banker boyfriend so her place is unbelievable. We're all going to share a taxi over.'
I smile. I can't believe how nice she's being. It's weird considering it's all about chicks showing their underwear, but the Moulin Rouge has this cool feminist edge to it, a sort of supportive sisterhood air.
âKat. How do you think you went today?'
âI'm terrible at these questions ⦠It was feeling slightly better by the end?'
âTomorrow is massive and you need to have that chorey down so I suggest an early night.'
âNo, absolutely. I think my body would thank me if I went to bed early.'
âPerfect.'
April moves off and Jade says, âIgnore her, she says that after every rehearsal.' She takes my arm and draws me along with her. âSeriously, Paris is a party town and physical fitness comes second to social stamina. We'll get your muscles straight into a jacuzzi.'
Jade is pretty convincing. A jacuzzi sounds more relaxing than going home to cheese on toast in
Bondi. I'd rather fall into a taxi than hobble to the bus station. And I am going to Paris with these girls. I'm going to need to be able to keep up with them, in more ways than one.
I'm surprised to see Christian waiting for me. I peel away from Jade momentarily. âYou're still here? What happened to the Benster?'
âPrix freak out. Suddenly couldn't handle a day without training.' The Prix is like the Olympics for balletbots and everyone's gone mental preparing for it. Except Christian apparently. He looks nervous, almost shy, as he asks, âWhat are you doing now?'
Relieved to have an excuse not to be alone with him, I gesture to Jade. âGirls' bonding session.'
âRight. Well, thanks for letting me hang out today.'
âQuality time,' I say flippantly.
Christian touches my arm and I flinch.
âWe're good now, aren't we?' Christian asks, concerned.
âMm-hm,' I lie. âTight.' I lock my fingers together. âLike glue.'
I hurry off to join Jade, unable to linger under his gaze any longer.