Authors: Lorie Ann Grover
Madame concludes.
Breathe in through my nose
and out through my mouth.
Again.
The old man pianist plays an intro.
His music immediately snaps me into place.
I'm braced on all sides of my body
by the rhythm.
I can do this
totally alone,
as long as I have the piano music.
So far so good.
I wipe down
and watch Margot's group
move through the complicated
combination.
She's definitely the best.
Her line is perfect
from her fingertips to her toes.
The judges have to see that.
Even the girl who cracked her knee
is moving well.
I saw her wrap it before she took the floor.
Where'd she get the bandage at the last minute?
Doesn't look like her knee's bothering her a bit.
Sweat drips into my eyes.
I rub the acidy burn away.
The judges' pencils
scratch along with
our quiet panting,
gritty shoe leather
brushing the wood floor,
and someone cracking their back.
I hand Rosella her towel.
“Thanks,” she mouths.
I smile.
“Group One,”
calls a judge with fake eyelashes
that curl up to her brows.
Yuck.
I hurry out
to the floor
for my turn.
What will they each scratch
about me?
The fifteen guys are grouped together.
It's weird to see
so many in one place.
Tommy is doing well
despite all the new girls around.
Nathan nailed his tour en l'air,
spinning high in the air
and landing in the same spot
he started from.
But Elton moves to the music
like no one else.
Those judges have to see his power
and grace.
He loves what he's doing.
Absolutely.
We line up for grands jetés
across the room.
I twist to stretch my sides
and catch Elton giving me a thumbs-up.
I smile, turn back,
take a huge breath,
run, and take off
in the highest, clearest leap
I've ever done.
I'm flying across the room
like the deer I saw with Grandpa!
The judges have to notice.
I've left everyone else behind.
I'm turned inside out.
This is me!
Beautiful!
The girls in the second group
are like small twigs
twirling in the wind.
I feel a bit faint.
Must be the tension
and not enough water.
I get a sip at the fountain,
then slide down in a corner
and close my eyes.
Satin pointe shoes squeaking
on wood,
rapping,
clunking,
thudding
over the creaking floorboards.
I open my eyes and feel
the girls land hard,
even when it looks like
they haven't landed at all.
Rap, rap, thud.
I've heard through
the illusion.
We all take the floor
and bow to the judges,
and then to ourselves
in the mirror.
I danced in here.
I rocked this place.
No one is going to tell me different.
We rise.
“High-five, Rosella.”
She smacks my palm. “Yes!”
It's over.
All the work
I've done for ten years
made me ready
for this audition.
And now it's over.
My dream is beginning.
We untie and unwind
our pointe shoes
the same way.
We fold in the heel
and wind the ribbons
around the shank.
Doing the same thing alike,
we are one dancer
scattered into pieces,
waiting to be put together
as the corps
of City Ballet Company.
That one girl
unwraps her knee
and there's a huge goose egg
sticking up.
She hops to the wall to balance.
Man. That's tough.
“Please wait in the barre room.”
Madame rolls her cane between her palms.
“The judges will post the City members
in half an hour.”
We flow out the door
and through the hall
like a real ballet corp.
Cameras flash
in the barre room,
and we pull apart.
Newspaper reporters
want interviews.
I move away to the window
as they speak to Rosella.
She doesn't seem to mind.
“R-O-S-E-L-L-A,” she spells.
Each journalist has found someone
to interview.
I'm safe for now.
Introverted and left alone.
Just the way I like it.
But a little lonely.
Elton's talking to Tommy
and Margot.
How do they think they did?
I could go ask.
I start to make my way toward them,
but the reporters push me aside
and gather in a tight circle.
What's going on?
I get a look through their legs
at a girl on the floor
huddled in a ball,
crying.
“I'll never make it!” she bawls.
“I'm not good enough.”
How humiliating!
“Clare.”
I look up.
Madame is calling me
from the doorway.
“Would you join me in my office?”
I clasp my hands
to still the shaking.
“Sit down, Clare,” says Madame.
I sit on the very edge of the chair.
My pelvis
nails the wood.
Madame slides into her seat
behind her big oak desk.
She opens a file.
My name is on the edge.
“Clare,” she says.
My skin creeps.
“Clare, you are a fine dancer.”
Yes!
“You are qualified
to be a member
of City Ballet Company.”
I'm busting open,
my smile is so huge.
Tingles race
over my goosebumped skin.
“But . . . ”
What?
“But . . . ” She flicks through my paperwork.
The air whooshes out of me.
I'm like a paper doll
about to drift
off the chair.
“Your body is not well designed
for the ballet.”
“Butâ”
“You are too tall,
and I speculate you haven't finished growing.
Clare, I hate for you
to devote yourself
at this level
to an art
you will never be suited for professionally.”
The sweat on my back
freezes.
“But, Madame, I danced as well as anyone
at the audition.”
“Yes, you did.”
“I did really well.”
“Yes.”
“My développé was above hip level.
My, myâ” My throat closes.
At least it stops my pathetic begging.
“Clare, I am sorry.
You
are
a dancer.
Which is why
I wanted to give you a chance at this audition
in case a taller group of girls turned out.
But it's not the case.
We have to face that you're not shaped
for classical ballet.
Before long
you'll be too tall
even for Pacific Northwest Ballet.
And in New York,
you would need to be a superstar
to succeed.
I don't see that potential in your work.”
Breathe. Breathe. Breathe.
“I have to remove you
from your class, Clare.
The group is going to consist
only of City members now.
They will be dancing far more
with their additional commitment,
and you will be left behind.
Several other girls will be shifted
to alternate classes.
You in particular,
because of your height,
are welcome to join the adults.”
“The adults?” I squeak.
“The adult class.
There you could continue to dance
for your own enjoyment.”
“I need to go now, Madame,” I whisper,
and stand.
“I am truly sorry, Clare.”
She closes my file.
Everything inside me
wants out.
I retch into the toilet
again
and again
until nothing else comes up,
but my guts keep trying
to crawl out
of my throat.
I heave sharp air,
then wipe the last dribble of vomit
off my lips
with a wad of toilet paper
and flush.
Everything swirls away.
I passed people
when I ran from the office
to the bathroom.
The reporters were still in the barre room
with a bunch of girls.
The dressing room
was full too.
But I don't remember any faces.
I'm not coming out of this stall
till everyone is gone.
Someone actually knocks.
“Are you okay?” she asks,
but gives up when I don't answer.
“We made it! We made it! We made it!”
two girls yell.
“I completely blew it,” says another.
“My father's going to kill me.”
I sit on the cold toilet cover
and wait till all the excitement, disappointment,
rustlings, and zippers disappear.
Rosella never found me.
Did she look?
I lean against the wall
and taste my thick, sour tongue.
I can't stop shivering.
The stall door creaks
when I come out.
Everyone's gone
from the dressing room.
Shaking,
I pull on my jeans,
clogs,
gather my stuff,
and cram it into my bag.
I run out.
The barre room's empty.
At least I don't have to look
at anyone.
Rosella.
Or Elton.
I race out onto the wet street.
It's like the conservatory
vomits me
out of its belly.
It's still sprinkling.
I step off the curb.
A car screeches, honks,
and swerves around me.
I rush across the street.
I feel so dizzy
stumbling past the shops.
I breathe faster and faster.
Sidewalk squares shift.
I splash through puddles.
Lights pierce my eyes.
There's Grandpa's hedge,
the porch swing,
Grandpa asking me something.
I'm falling.
Darkness.
Finally.
Lying in the backseat.
I don't have my seatbelt on.
“It's okay, love,” says Grandpa. “It's okay.”
Grandpa helps me out of the car.
Wheelchair
squeaking.
Thermometer
beeping.
Blood pressure cuff
tightening.
Stretcher
zooming.
Rubber strip
squeezing.
Needle
jabbing.
IV
taped down
to the pale hairs
on my arm.
Dehydrated.
That's all.
Dehydrated.
I twirl the armband on my wrist
and stare at the needle
submerged in my skin
dripping clear liquid into me.
How embarrassing.
I can't even keep enough water down
so I don't faint,
let alone dance.
The ER corner's empty
except for a picture of Goofy in Disneyland
and the Space Needle taped to the wall.
Neither one is enough to distract me
from the IV
and the mysterious machines.
This must be the kids' cubicle.
The two curtains shift as someone walks by.
I shudder
and pull the warm blanket
to my chin.
The cold IV
is chilling me
inside out.
Grandpa comes in.
He tugs the drapes closed behind him.
“You gave me a scare, love.”
I bite my lip.
He smoothes my stray hairs
back toward my squashed bun.
“It'll be all right.”
I shake my head no.
Tears pop out.
“I'm sorry,” I whisper.
“No harm done.”
“I'm sorry.
“Clare, we only need to make sure
you drink more.”
“I mean about not making the company.”
“Sh. Stop. I know all about it.
Madame called me
right after the audition.”
“Everyone knows
I'm not a dancerâ”
“Yes you are, Clare.”
My lips start blubbering.
Grandpa still
doesn't get it.
“I called your mom and dad.”
“Oh, no,” I groan.
“Clare, they needed to know.”
I kick at the blanket,
which hurts my feet,
but I don't care.
Grandpa straightens it out.
“They are on their way home.
They'll make it back tomorrow.”
Our dream's dead,
and it's all my fault.
I shut my eyes.
Drip, drip.
Grandpa holds my free hand.
“Owwwww!” yells a little boy.
“The stick went into his eye!”
squeals a woman.
The screams are right on the other side
of my curtain.
I watch a group of feet
shuffle beside gurney wheels
out of sight and earshot.
I loosen my grip on Grandpa.
His eyes are closed.
Is he praying for them?
Drip, drip.
“Here, suck on some ice,” Grandpa tells me.
Next there's a man who's hurt his back
and can't walk.
“Please, please give me more pain killer,”