Authors: Lorie Ann Grover
You're supposed to be my friend.”
I raise my voice, “I am.”
The other girls stare at us.
I glare at Rosella,
but she doesn't notice.
She crams her stuff in her bag
and leaves without looking back.
Rosella's mom waves to me
as Rosella climbs into their convertible.
They pull out into traffic,
so neither one sees me
wave back.
The crosswalk light
takes forever to change.
I stare at the red hand.
Finally it turns
to the walking person.
I jog across Main Street,
hurrying by the yellow daffodil silhouette
spray painted on the asphalt.
The flowers mark every intersection in town.
The crosswalk light changes
before I get to the curb,
like always.
I reach the sidewalk
as the cars roll over the painted flower.
Nearly all the nearby farms grow daffs.
Grandpa says once everyone grew hops
till disease took the crops.
I can't imagine beer mugs
painted at all the corners.
I brush gently against the heart-shaped leaves
trailing from the streetlight hanging baskets.
I smile at the judge watering his begonias
outside the Hammermaster Law Office.
He's the only judge in town,
so everyone recognizes him.
Even me,
just from visiting Grandpa so much.
“Hello,” he says as water
splatters down onto the cement.
“Hi.”
I walk past.
The splashing water sound reminds me of Rosella.
Yuck.
I could never puke like she does.
Even if I was overweight,
I'd eat less or something.
She eats less and vomits.
Where does she get energy
to get through class?
What am I supposed to do?
She's definitely getting worse.
Other girls do it every now and then,
but Rosella is puking
after every class.
What about at home?
Should I tell her mom
or mine?
My grandpa, since I'm living with him
this summer?
Madame?
I'm Rosella's friend.
She should listen to me.
I slip by the skinny tendrils dangling
from the last flower basket.
Or maybe I should listen to Rosella
and shut up?
She does have to stay thin . . . .
Grandpa's house and garden
are surrounded by
a tall laurel hedge.
Sometimes, before I walk through
the little iron gate,
the shrubs look mean,
like they are trying to keep me out.
But other times,
the shrubs are like big arms
waiting to hug me into Grandpa's house.
Today I step through the gate
easily.
The garden flowers sway
in the late afternoon wind.
Even the house's sloping Tudor roof
looks like a lopsided smile.
I race up the porch steps
and open the storm door.
Classical music
plays softly
for Mija,
his sixteen-year-old black cat.
Today the hedge and house
seem just right.
“I'm home, Grandpa!”
“Hello, love,” he calls from the back porch.
I pour a big glass of orange juice
and nuke a bag of fat-free popcorn.
I stretch out on the couch.
Mija manages to leap up,
nibbles a piece I dropped,
then stretches and arches her back.
She slinks down
and disappears around the corner
with perfect grace,
despite her crickety old self.
Grandpa comes in and sits
in his small velvet chair.
“How was dancing today, Clare?”
“Class
was fine,” I answer.
“Did you express yourself
with those fast spins on one leg?”
“Fouettés. Yeah.”
“Excellent. There's nothing like dance.
When your grandmother was alive,
she and I ruled
the ballroom.”
I zone out.
I've heard this a thousand times.
I barely remember my grandma.
She died when I was little.
Finally he finishes.
He smiles and crosses his legs.
“Pass the popcorn, please.”
I do.
Only a couple kernels
roll around on the bottom of the bowl.
“You are a scoundrel,” he says.
“My couch, my juice, and all my popcorn.”
“But I'm your granddaughter.” I grin.
“That you are, Clare.”
He runs his bumpy finger
around the bowl.
“You don't need that salt, Grandpa.”
He raises an eyebrow above his glasses
and licks his finger clean.
“You're right,” he says. “One more lick.”
I dump our empty microwave dinner plates
into the garbage.
Enough time left for a bath.
“Night, Grandpa.” I kiss him
on the forehead.
“Night, Clare.” He slips back to sleep
in his chair.
In the pink-and-black bathroom,
I peel off my cold leotard and tights
like a layer of skin.
While the soaking powder dissolves in the water,
I sit on the chilly toilet lid
and pick the tape off my toes.
I step into the tub.
Yikes! It burns, burns, burns
the open sores
on my feet.
Then it stops.
Hey.
The tub seems shorter
than ours at home.
I shiver
in the hot water.
Everyone is sacrificing
so my dream to dance
with City Ballet
comes true.
Mom and Dad pay for shoes, clothes, and lessons.
Grandpa helps pay for them too,
and lets me live here for the summer.
So much money is spent on me,
I have to sacrifice
my whole body.
I can't waste a dime.
I dial,
tug the sheet
up between my legs,
and leave my throbbing feet poking out.
The cool night air slips around the room,
but I'm too beat to get up and close the windows.
I don't know if I have enough energy
to even talk to Mom.
But here goes.
“Hello?”
“Hi, Mom.”
“Clare! How was class?
Was it fun and energizing?
Did you do well?”
“It was fine.”
“Great! And
is everything going smoothly
with your grandfather?
Are you two still getting along?
No problems now, I hope.”
“No, we're doing okay.
It's still easier staying here
than taking the bus every day
from our apartment.”
“That was the plan.
A good plan.
I knew it would be.
You're getting the best instruction
right in my old hometown.
I'll never figure out
how Ballet Conservatory
ended up there.
Someone liked the setting,
I suppose,
at some point.
So there you have it.
And it's all worked out for us.
Tell me,
how are your new shoes holding up?”
“They're okay.
Mostly.
I, um, I'll need another pair
in a couple weeks.”
“I'll put in the order, Clare.
Happy to do it for you.”
“Sorry I'm wearing them out so quickly.”
“Now, now. None of that.
Anything for our dream.
Any word on the audition, sweetheart?
You must be so excited.
I bet it's only days away.
I understand
they wait to post the announcement
till just before the tryouts,
to keep nerves at bay.
So, Clare,
have you heard yet?”
“Not yet, Mom.” I scrinch the sheet
into my fist.
She talks a hundred miles a second
through every minute.
“Well, when all goes as planned,
are you ready to spend the school year
with Grandpa?
It would be a perfect location for you.
Think aboutâ”
“Definitely. I'd like to stay here.
It's close to the conservatory.
Rosella is psyched that I'd be in her school.
And it's not like I'd be leaving
a ton of friends behind.”
“No,
ballet study hasn't left time
for friendships, has it?
But then, that's completely understandable,
and you do have Rosella.
She's such a dear.”
“Yeah. But, Mom?”
“Yes?”
“I would miss working at the bookstore
with you and Dad.”
“That's nice of you to say, Clare.
But like we discussed,
you could come home after class
occasionally,
on Saturdays,
and earn some money.”
“That'd be good.”
“I drove by your and Rosella's
old dance school today.
You both have certainly outgrown
their little yearly performances for parents.”
“Definitely.”
“And now you are at the conservatory,
ready to audition
for City Ballet Company.
Next it will be Pacific Northwest Ballet,
or even New York City, Clare!
Our dream is about to come true, honey!”
“Mom, you sound like a sappy commercial.”
“Well, I'm so proud!
But since it's late, I'll let you go.
You need to get your rest.”
I let go of the sheet
and try to smooth it out.
“Oh, and Dad sends his love, Clare.”
“Love to him too.”
“And he says to remind you, âWork hard.
Failure is not in your future.'Â ”
“Yeah. Right.” Dad's favorite line. “Night, Mom.”
“Good night, my little ballerina.”
Click.
Little?
Ballerina?
Why can't Mom focus
on one thing?
Why can't I think about City Ballet
without the pressure of PNB
or some New York company
in the way far-off future?
City Ballet is what I'm working for.
Isn't that enough, Mom?
“Clare,” Grandpa calls
through my bedroom door
in the morning.
“Clare.”
I don't answer
and wait for him to give up.
He cracks the door
and peeks in.
I close my eyes and lie
perfectly still.
He closes the door
and heads out to church.
Every week he tries this.
I take class six days out of seven.
Let me at least chill out on Sunday!
Even Mom said I didn't have to go to church.
Everyone agreed to that
before I moved in.
We've never gone.
Why should I start
because I'm staying with Grandpa?
I snuggle down
under my covers.
After I wake and eat lunch,
I go out and weed
in Grandpa's garden.
I rip out the clover enthusiastically
to make up for not going with him.
“Hi.” I wave as Grandpa pulls in.
“What're you doing there, Clare?”
“Some weeding.” I beam,
ready for sure praise.
“Oh.” He shuts the car door.
“Want to help me?”
“No. But thanks. I don't work
on the Lord's Day.”
The trowel slips from my muddy hand.
“Oh, right. Sorry.”
“Why don't you come in,
and we'll have a simple lunch.”
“IâI already ate.”
He nods and goes inside.
Ugh. I stab the dandelion roots
with the weeder stick
and yank the plant out of the dirt.
I heave it at the wheelbarrow.
Why can't I ever seem to do the right thing
to please Grandpa?
He naps
then goes back to church at night.
For evening service
he doesn't bother knocking on my door.
Just leaves me a note saying
he'll eat dinner with his friends
afterward,
and I can find something
in the freezer.
I hide out in my room
through the afternoon.
Reading and napping to avoid him
till he leaves again.
Come on.
Everyone needs a down day.
Right?
“Morning.”
“Morning, love.”
Since Sunday's over,
everything will be normal again between us.
Not weirdo stressed.
It's been the pattern since I moved in.
Grandpa's smiling,
which helps me smile back.
I kiss his cheek
and smell warm prune juice.
Yuck.
He dabs his mouth. “Aha!”
“What?”
He fills in the last squares
on his crossword.
“Not in unison is
discordant.”
I stir my breakfast drink.
This is it for me.
Rosella vomiting makes me feel too guilty
to eat anything else.
“D-i-s-c-o-r-d-a-n-t,” he spells.
“When something doesn't fit in
with the rest. Like a note in music.”
He looks up at me.
“Right,” I say.
Discordant.
Like one girl who's taller
than the rest.
The skin on my back
crawls against my T-shirt.
My tights squeeze my legs.
My leotard encases my body.
I wind my ponytail tighter and tighter
and pin it to my head.
I'm a ballet student
who feels like a lean linked
sausage.
I shove over the covers,
sit on my bed,
and cut foot holes