Three Wishes

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Three Wishes Page 16

by Juli Alexander


  I stood straighter, lifting my rib cage and tucking my derriere under as I prepared to bend my knees and lower myself to the ground in a grand plié. I have a natural tendency to slouch, so even though I’ve been dancing for years, I still have to consciously remind myself not to. It may be more comfortable, but it definitely doesn’t look very nice. Monsieur Dmilov pushed on the back of my thigh to verify that I’d engaged my gluts, then satisfied that I had readjusted my alignment, moved on to his next victim.

  The class raced through the positions – first, second, fourth, fifth – skipping third since it was useless, finally finishing with a grand port de bras to stretch our bodies. As I leaned forward, dropping to the ground with a graceful sweeping motion before straightening back up again, I caught the accompanist’s eye and smiled.

  It was a standard barre exercise, just like the start of class on any other day. Only it wasn’t any other day. Today was Nutcracker audition day.

  The nervous energy in the theatre was palpable. The next ninety minutes would determine how we’d spend the rest of the fall semester. What roles would we dance? A soldier or a soloist?

  I looked around the stage at a sea of clones. In their black leotards, pink tights, satin toe shoes, slim physiques, and hair pulled back into a tight bun, the other girls looked almost identical to me, like a genetic experiment gone awry. At first glance, the only way to tell us all apart was by skin tone and hair color.

  I wondered whether this was intentional. By tamping down our individual fashion sense in class, the underlying message was that we were not prima ballerinas. Yet. Most of us would be dancing in the corps, where our only responsibility was to perform choreography in a large group, nothing more. Standing out in the corps de ballet would mean you were doing something wrong, since the group was supposed to move as one body. The only time you wanted to be invisible.

  A tall order for a group of girls who all had been the star back at home.

  Would I be assigned to dance in the corps this year? Probably. I was just a freshman. The soloist roles were generally reserved for upperclassmen. Except for the boys, of course. Guys were lucky, because nobody really expected too much from them since they were few and far between. Girls were expected to be perfect, but as long as a guy could point his toes, jump, and make a reasonable effort at turns, everyone got excited and turned a blind eye to any deficiencies in his technique.

  And if he was both cute and straight it was just a bonus.

  It wasn’t fair.

  But nothing in ballet was fair, so I would just have to suck it up and deal, otherwise I would spend every waking hour making rug angels of despair for the rest of my life.

  Jealousy was the disco-dancing, neon pink gorilla in the middle of the stage that nobody wanted to talk about. But we all felt it, of course.

  Even Hadley Taylor.

  Mountain Shadows’ current star, Hadley was a junior and everyone’s prediction for this year’s Sugar Plum Fairy. She was also a certifiably unpleasant person to be around.

  Look up the B-word in the dictionary and they have a picture of her right under the definition.

  Or they should.

  Hadley commanded the place of honor at the front of the barre. It wasn’t an official position or anything. She just grabbed it on the first day of class and nobody was brave enough to challenge her for it.

  A sharp clap broke my reverie and brought me back to the here-and-now. “Grands battements. Four front, four side, four back, four side. Á la seconde, you will close front first. Front, back, front, back.”

  Monsieur Dmilov briefly marked the pattern of the exercise, using his arms to substitute for his legs since we were supposed to understand simply from the names of the steps. “Crisp movements, ladies. At the end of each one, bring your feet back together in a tight fifth. If I try to squeeze a credit card between them, I should not succeed.” He nodded at our reigning teen queen. “Miss Taylor, please demonstrate.”

  Hadley didn’t even attempt to suppress her smug smile as she effortlessly kicked her leg high in the air. She had exquisite extension, each movement fluid. She was born to dance.

  And she knew it.

  But so was I. And I was going to show them.

  An hour later, sweaty and feeling the burn of the workout tingling in every inch of my muscles, I dropped to the floor with the rest of the girls in grand révérance to our instructor and accompanist. I’d done this at the end of every ballet class for years, but today the curtsy was almost a prayer. An offering sent up to hopefully ensure a role. If I knew an Indian rain dance I’d probably try that, too.

  We could use the rain in Arizona.

  I just had to dance a solo. Clara would be great. Or Snow Queen. Or even one of the life-sized dolls. I wasn’t picky.

  Normally we would exit as quickly as possible, rushing to get back to the dorms, but today we all lingered, hoping to catch a glimpse of the cast list as soon as it was posted.

  “You looked great today, Dani,” my friend Maya Sapp said as I untied the satin ribbons of my toe shoes.

  “You, too.”

  She laughed. “Now you’re just being nice.”

  “No way. I saw that triple pirouette during the adagio. It was gorgeous. So smooth you almost hung in the air.”

  “Well, I fully expect I’ll be dancing Snow again.”

  “Snow Queen?”

  She shook her head. “One of the snowflakes in the corps. I think Ana’s got that solo in the bag.”

  I had to agree. Our friend Analisa San Miguel was the epitome of elegance and grace. She’d make a beautiful Snow Queen. She hadn’t come backstage yet, but had instead climbed into the orchestra pit to chat with the accompanist and practice her Spanish.

  Well, that was one solo down. No, make that two. Hadley would definitely be Sugar Plum.

  “Who do you think will be Clara?” I asked.

  Me, me, me, me, me, I silently chanted, as if that could actually make it come true.

  Maya shrugged. “I don’t know. I think you’re probably a strong contender. Or maybe Kat?”

  “But she’s a triple threat. Why would she want to be Clara?”

  “Just because she wants to sing and dance on Broadway doesn’t mean she wouldn’t want a lead in a ballet.”

  I wrinkled my brow. “I thought she was a senior. Isn’t that too old to dance the part of a twelve-year-old?”

  “Not on stage. Kat’s short. She could pull it off. Besides, pros do it all the time in the companies, and they’re in their twenties.”

  Crap.

  She was right. And Kat would be perfect for the part. She had such an innocence about her when she danced. A natural actress. I could almost picture her skipping around the stage in the party scene with the wooden nutcracker, a present from her weird Uncle Drosselmeyer.

  Okay, back to the drawing board.

  Maybe I could dance Arabian? Or Chinese? The around-the-world dances in the Land of Sweets were always a crowd pleaser. Arabian would be super hot.

  I shoved my toe shoes in my bag and was standing up to leave when Analisa joined us.

  “Good class today. Easy,” she said, tucking an imaginary stray wisp back into her tight bun.

  Easy? My legs hurt way too much for a supposed easy class. But no way was I about to admit that. Especially not with Hadley within earshot.

  In the great scheme of things, I guess it wasn’t the most technically challenging class I’d ever taken. It seemed designed to observe us more than anything. I guess the challenging was in impressing the director.

  “Dmilov was totally loving you,” she continued, looking directly at me.

  He was? “No way. He kept criticizing me.”

  “Dani, Dani, Dani.” Maya shook her head. “Haven’t you learned anything yet? Criticism is good.”

  I knew that, but sometimes the fragile artist’s self-esteem needs a boost. Especially when you were afraid you’d danced like a cow.

  Or looked like one.

  �
��Much better to be noticed than not,” Analisa agreed.

  Maya laughed. “Like me. He totally ignored me. I could’ve just slept in and nobody would’ve been the wiser. But I expected that.”

  “Why?” I asked. “You were on Teen Celebrity Dance-Off. You’re one the best dancers at the school!”

  “I’m a contemporary dancer, Dani. Ballet’s not my thing. Not like it is for you and Ana. You’re the bunheads.” She shrugged and rolled her shoulders to work out the kinks in her muscles. “It’s okay. I’ll have fun dancing Snow. I already know the choreography.”

  “Wanna go grab a smoothie while we wait?” Analisa asked.

  I flinched, both from the question and from the pain of my bleeding toes as I peeled back the lamb’s wool I’d shoved inside my dance shoes. (I always laugh when people say that dancers probably have the nicest feet. Do they actually know any dancers?)

  Did I really need the extra calories and sugar from a smoothie? I had costumes to fit into – well, I would if I got a role, that is.

  Maya must have seen my hesitation because she answered for me. “Yes, she does. Let’s get out of here.”

  We left campus and walked the two blocks to Groovie Smoothie. I thought about ordering a bottle of water and calling it a day, but I knew Ana and Maya weren’t going to hear of it. I knew they were worried about me, but they were wrong. I didn’t have a problem.

  Really.

  Sure, I’d agreed last month to see a body image counselor. And I’d been going, but it wasn’t the least bit necessary. Interesting – I was learning a lot – but not for me.

  The dance department was full of hypocrites. They encouraged us to do whatever it took to be slim and trim so we would look good up on stage, but they didn’t want the liability of their dancers ending up hospitalized. So my counseling was just a formality, and everyone knew it.

  Besides, I didn’t have a problem. Really.

  “I’ll have an extra-large Mango Madness with a raspberry swirl.” I could just have a fruit smoothie, no need for yogurt. Lo-cal, no fat. Perfect. “Oh, and a soft pretzel,” I added with pointed look at Maya.

  See, I didn’t have a problem. Really.

  We grabbed our snacks and headed back to the theatre to check on the result.

  No list. Damn.

  We were just packing up to go back to the dorms when an excited cry rang out from the far end of the room. “The list!”

  I limped down the aisle to join the crowd of girls all huddled around a small sheet of paper tacked to the wall. The list contained both girls’ and boys’ names, even though the particular audition we’d just completed was girls-only. The boys took class in a different studio, and their audition was less competitive since there are so many fewer of them so they were pretty much all guaranteed roles.

  The crowd was six deep in front of the soloist list, so I checked out the results for the corps first.

  My eyes scanned down to the S’s:

  Maya Sapp

  Talia Small

  Alexis Sutton

  Lydia Tsai

  They skipped me. They skipped me! Which could only mean one thing.

  I was going to be a soloist! Sweet!

  “Excuse me. Pardon me,” I said, elbowing my way to the front of the other list.

  OMG! My name, right there in bold font.

  Sugar Plum Fairy

  Hadley Taylor

  Daniela Spevak (understudy)

  Me – the Sugar Plum Fairy! As a freshman! I couldn’t believe it, but there it was in black and white. I couldn’t wait to share my news.

  I spun around and saw Analisa and Maya. “I’m dancing Sugar Plum!”

  “No, I’m dancing Sugar Plum,” Hadley sneered, behind me.

  “What do you mean?”

  Analisa bit her lip. “You’re the understudy, Dani.”

  I turned back to the list and checked it again. She was right. I was the understudy.

  Worse yet, I was Hadley’s understudy. How could I have missed that crucial piece of info?

  “That’s fantastic, Dani.” Maya threw her arms around me and enveloped me in a bear hug. “You go, girl!”

  I shrugged out of her grasp and scanned the list again. My name didn’t appear anywhere other than that understudy role. It had to be a mistake.

  “I’m not…performing?”

  Hadley laughed. “Looks that way. Sucks to be you.”

  Now I knew why dancers say “merde” instead of “good luck.” This was shit. For real.

  But I wasn’t going to let anyone see me cry.

  I looked at the cast list again. Maya was right – Analisa was going to be the Snow Queen. I was thrilled for her. I really was.

  But why didn’t I get a role? I mean, I’m just a freshman, so I guess I shouldn’t have expected a solo. I was honored to understudy such a prestigious role at just fourteen years old, but why couldn’t I also be a Snowflake or even a girl in the party scene?

  “Congrats, Hadley,” I said, pasting on my happy face. “And Ana, yay!”

  After the requisite round of congratulations, I sneaked out the back with the rest of the rejects while everyone else was still chattering about the upcoming rehearsals.

  Hours and hours of rehearsals that I would have to attend, even though I wouldn’t get a chance to dance in the performances. Because let’s face it. Short of a tragedy, there was no way Hadley wouldn’t be dancing.

  It just wasn’t fair.

  Why wasn’t I good enough? Monsieur Dmilov corrected me, so I know he saw something in my dancing that he wanted to cultivate. And just last month I danced on national TV. So it couldn’t be my dancing.

  Which only left one thing.

  I ran to the bathroom and threw up.

  My Life as the Ugly Stepsister

  by

  Juli Alexander

  Chapter One

  Do not teach your mother to use the Internet. No good can come of it. –Ally’s Brutal Teen Truths

  “What do you mean we may be moving to Seattle to live with your Internet boyfriend? That’s insane.” I glared at my mother over the half-empty pizza box. “It’s all the way across the country.”

  I swear it will be a miracle if I make it through my teens without a psychiatric hospitalization. I forgot to breathe for a moment. Oh my God, I started high school in less than two weeks and she wanted to move?

  My mom tried to smile, but even she knew this was not the time. “Calm down, Ally. Let me explain.”

  I don’t know about you, but when people tell me to calm down, it makes me really, really want to smack them.

  “You aren’t coming with me.” She lifted her paper plate and stacked it on top of mine. Mom worked long hours and doing dishes was the one thing she’d cut out for New Year’s. She’d cut out home-cooked meals when Dad left two years ago.

  “What!” Even worse than uprooting me, she was totally abandoning me? Then I realized the horrible truth. “I am not living with Dad and Diane. No way.” Dread unfurled in my stomach.

  Mojo, my black and tan hound, came into the kitchen to check on the ruckus. He gave Mom a curious look and slipped under the table to lie at my feet.

  Mom put on her “Let’s be reasonable” face. “Now, Ally. It’s just for four months. That’s it. It’s like summer vacation. It will be over before you know it.”

  I hadn’t seen this coming. Not at all. All those hours Mom spent on the phone with that guy in Seattle. I’d thought it was harmless. I’d actually believed it was good for her. “Mom, I’m sure you can find somebody here in Charlotte to date. You’re not ugly or anything.”

  She flinched but obviously decided to ignore my insulting compliment. “I think Donald may be my Mr. Right. I’d really like to give this relationship a chance, but long distance just isn’t practical. I don’t want to uproot you without knowing for sure.” She ran her hand through the fresh red highlights in her brown hair. Her natural color hadn’t been good enough since the divorce.

  “Why can’
t he just come here?” I was barely coping with the known, no way could I handle the unknown. “What’s so great about Seattle?”

  “Donald’s worked hard to build his insurance business, Ally. He can’t just leave it. But there is always work for an experienced paralegal. I’ve already got two job offers. Besides, he’s got an apartment over the garage.”

  My stomach cramped at the betrayal. She’d applied for jobs before talking to me.

  Mom pressed on, “Besides, if things work out between Donald and me, I know you’d be happy there. Seattle is supposed to be beautiful. The Emerald City with evergreen trees and mountains. They say it’s just spectacular.”

  “We have trees and mountains around here. People move to North Carolina all the time for the spectacular,” I mimicked Mom’s emphasis on the word, “views.”

  “You could learn to ski.”

  “I can ski here. In North Carolina.” I crossed my arms. “Where we live now.”

  “You’ll be right on the Pacific coast.”

  “We can drive to the Atlantic anytime we want.” I accidentally applied too much tension and snapped my plastic fork in half, sticking my finger. “Ow.” No blood at least. Wait a minute. Back up. She was living over his garage. Right.

  “Ally, I know you’re upset,” she said, ignoring my cry of pain. “That’s why I’m asking you to stay with your dad for four months. Let me see if this relationship is worth it.”

  I looked into the green eyes of the woman who’d raised me, hating her calm expression. “So you’ll forget the whole thing in four months if you don’t like him?”

  “Yes.” Her shoulders relaxed a little. “I just want to give it a chance.”

  “Okay. So if your relationship with this guy is like a four on a scale of one to ten, you’ll come home?”

  “Yes.”

  “What if it’s a six?”

  “Probably.” She shrugged. “Ally, I really can’t give you any probabilities. Love is not a science.”

  Love. Barf! This was all Dad’s fault for leaving Mom in the first place. Now she was dating, shaving her legs regularly, coloring her hair, and leaving me.

 

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