by Brady Hammes
The Resolutions is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2020 by Brady Hammes
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
BALLANTINE and the HOUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
ISBN 9781984818034
Ebook ISBN 9781984818041
randomhousebooks.com
Title page images from istock
Book design by Barbara M. Bachman, adapted for ebook
Cover design: Jaya Miceli
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Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Epigraph
Part One
Samantha
Jonah
Gavin
Samantha
Jonah
Gavin
Samantha
Jonah
Gavin
Samantha
Jonah
Gavin
Part Two
Samantha
Gavin
Jonah
Gavin
Jonah
Samantha
Gavin
Jonah
Samantha
Gavin
Part Three
Jonah
Samantha
Gavin
Samantha
Jonah
Gavin
Jonah
Samantha
Gavin
Jonah
Gavin
Samantha
Jonah
Gavin
Samantha
Dedication
Acknowledgments
About the Author
None of us can help the things life has done to us. They’re done before you realize it, and once they’re done they make you do other things until at last everything comes between you and what you’d like to be, and you’ve lost your true self forever.
—Eugene O’Neill, Long Day’s Journey into Night
SAMANTHA
SHE STOOD IN A THICKET of trees at the edge of campus, this place she now called home, a Russian dance company two hundred kilometers northeast of Moscow. The sun hung low in the sky, dropping with the temperature, and her toes were numb from hiking through snow. She’d been gone all afternoon, and now she was late for the dinner party, which posed a significant problem because prolonged absences didn’t go unnoticed at a place like this. Nikolai, the director of the company, presided over his dancers with the omniscience of a cult leader, and Sam knew she would need a good excuse to explain her disappearance. Unfortunately, no one was buying her excuses anymore.
Nikolai’s father was a steel oligarch who had purchased the estate as a summer retreat for his family, but then the family stopped speaking to one another so Nikolai claimed it for himself. He amassed a roster of choreographers and dancers from across the globe, and hired a team of contractors to refurbish the grounds. He erected a dozen small cottages—little two-bedroom units the dancers shared—and commissioned a famous architect to design the studio space, a three-thousand-square-foot glass cube situated amid dense conifer forest. Nikolai referred to the property as Château Oksana—named for his mother—but everyone else called it campus. Sam imagined it was the closest thing she would ever have to a proper college experience, probably not so different from those fancy private academies in New England. She slept in what was essentially a well-appointed dorm room, attended classes at a rehearsal space rather than a lecture hall, and took her meals in an upscale cafeteria. Even now, in mid-December, everything blanketed in a foot of snow, the grounds were impeccably groomed, the sidewalks brushed and cleared, the trees hung with decorative lights. There was an onsite staff to attend to the dancers’ needs, nothing more than a phone call away, yet it was a suffocating kind of luxury, like being held hostage at Versailles.
At the center of campus was the grand manor, a ten-thousand-square-foot palace that served as the social hub. She watched a procession of black SUVs unload passengers at the entrance, where Nikolai stood greeting a parade of sparkling men and women in formal attire. When he turned to kiss the cheek of an elderly, silver-haired woman, Sam made a break for it, sprinting past the rehearsal space and the gym and finally to her cottage. Once inside, she threw her coat on the bed and removed the small baggie printed with smiley faces. Restraint was not a thing she normally possessed in moments like this, but she was late and she needed to keep her head up through the party, so she stashed the baggie at the bottom of her sock drawer, a reward deferred. She moved to the bathroom and did a quick pass of makeup before slipping into a sleeveless black dress. She dabbed concealer on her forearm to mask the bruise, then looked in the mirror one last time, a woman with a question.
Can you do this?
* * *
—
SAM STEPPED OUTSIDE AND HURRIED toward the ballroom, her heels clacking against the sidewalk, her shoulders burning against the wind. She should have brought a coat, but her head was not clear, and when her head was not clear, she forgot things like coats. It had been two days since she’d gotten high, and that was a problem.
Once a month, Nikolai threw a formal dinner party at the estate. He invited colleagues from the ballet world as well as friends from Moscow, mostly men who enjoyed mingling with the dancers. A few of the guests came for legitimate reasons, but most—the musicians, the minor celebrities, the baggy-suited hedge fund managers—came to gawk and make lewd sexual innuendos about “first position.” Sam found the events reprehensible, as if she were part of a parade of dancing prostitutes. At the last party, she poured a glass of Chianti on the head of a sweet-talking investment banker after he put his hand on her ass and whispered stunning into her ear. After the incident, Nikolai placed her on an informal probation to ensure a similar embarrassment didn’t befall another of his guests. Sam, however, made it clear to him that the best way to prevent future incidents was to instruct his guests to keep their fucking hands to themselves.
She’d been summoned to tonight’s party to meet a new choreographer Nikolai had recruited, though most of the names he’d promised had yet to materialize so she wasn’t expecting much. The two productions the company had mounted since her arrival had been savagely reviewed, which Sam attributed to their hack choreographers, one of whom was plucked from the Russian equivalent of Dancing with the Stars. The company’s cachet had taken a blow in recent months, and Sam knew Nikolai needed a win as much as she did.
She entered the hall and scanned the crowd. Her arrival had drawn little notice and for this she felt a speck of relief. An old man was butchering Vivaldi on the piano, and tuxedoed waiters floated around the room with trays of hors d’oeuvres that appeared untouched. A few girls in tall heels and short dresses were huddled at the bar, cocktails in hand, chatting in a language she’d made no attempt to learn. She looked around the room: the crystal chandelier hanging from a forty-foot ceiling, the nineteenth-century watercolors adorning the walls, the Steinway piano. It was all
somewhat surreal in its extravagance: the campus, the catered meals and personal trainers, even this dress she was wearing, a dress she hadn’t paid for but that probably cost more than most people made in a week, maybe a month. Her talent had shown her so much of the world, taken her so far—Chicago to New York, New York to Moscow—yet she still felt as if she’d been pulled into a terrible black void.
“Sam,” came a voice. She turned to see Marie, the only other American in the company, walking toward her. “Nikolai’s been looking for you. Where have you been?”
“I went into town,” Sam said.
“Is everything okay?” Marie asked.
Everything was not okay, but she wasn’t about to open up about it during cocktail hour, so instead she asked Marie to join her for a cigarette.
“It’s freezing outside,” Marie said.
“We’ll be quick,” Sam said. “Please? I need to get out of here.”
“You just got here.”
“Exactly.”
They stepped outside and Sam pulled a pack of cigarettes from her purse, handing one to Marie.
“Where’s your coat?” Marie asked.
“I forgot it.”
“How do you forget your coat?”
Sam shook her head. “I don’t know.”
“What I want to know,” Marie asked, cupping her hands around the lighter, “is what you were doing in town?”
“I went to see a friend.”
“Who?”
“Just some guy.”
“Really?” Marie asked, smiling, wanting more. “You walked all the way to Yaroslavl?”
“It’s not that far.” Which was true. Thirty minutes round trip if she hurried, which she often did.
“Yeah, but in this weather?”
“I jogged,” Sam said with a shrug. “It was a good workout.”
“So who is he, this guy? And why am I just now hearing about him?”
His name was Ivan, and he was a twenty-one-year-old high school dropout who cobbled together a living by repairing broken computers and selling heroin from the apartment he shared with his grandmother. Sam had met him shortly after arriving in Russia. It was one of the rare occasions when Nikolai permitted an off-site field trip to a restaurant in town, and Sam had spotted him smoking outside: a skinny, ratty-looking kid with bloodshot eyes. He spoke broken English, but Sam communicated her needs with a little tap on the forearm and a raise of the eyebrows. She ended up getting his phone number and enough drugs to get her through the week. She kept in touch with him after that, sneaking away from campus whenever her supply ran low. “No one,” she finally said. “It’s kind of over anyway.”
“So mysterious,” Marie said, extinguishing her cigarette. “You almost done? I’m freezing.”
Inside, the conversation had quieted and Nikolai was instructing everyone to move to the dining hall for dinner. As the crowd filtered out, he approached Sam and put a hand on her shoulder. “You’re late to the party,” he said.
Nikolai was close to six and a half feet tall, with a mane of blond hair working its way toward white. He wore a tuxedo and an ostentatious watch and glossy crocodile shoes. Everything about him seemed to be cut from the finest, most expensive cloth, and he made sure to flaunt this air of elegance to everyone he met.
“I went into town,” Sam said. “For personal items.”
“We have drivers for that.”
“I felt like walking.”
“You’ve been here long enough to know that’s not how it works.”
“Sorry.”
“You know there’s a reason they call it a company, Samantha. I try to run it like a business. I take care of my employees, provide help when they need it.”
Sam plucked a glass of champagne from a passing waiter. Nikolai stared at her, waiting for a response. “Samantha?”
She took a sip. “Yes?”
“Do you need help?”
She shook her head.
Nikolai looked at the purple mark stamped across the inside of her forearm. She’d missed her vein a week ago and the bruise lingered, despite her rushed attempt to conceal it. “What happened to your arm?”
“I fell,” she said, turning slightly away from him.
Nikolai scoffed.
“I slipped on some ice walking down the stairs and hit it on the handrail.” It was a quick, convincingly crafted piece of fiction, for which she felt a small burst of pride. “You should talk to the maintenance guys about that. It could have been much worse.”
“You know what it looks like to me?” Nikolai asked.
“Like it hurts? Not too bad actually. It did right after it happened, but not so much now.”
He shook his head, unamused. “We have a zero tolerance policy here.”
“Got it,” Sam said, hoping to end the conversation. Nikolai wasn’t worried about her well-being so much as the troublesome press that would result from one of his dancers dying of a heroin overdose. Sam had become a liability, a neighborhood kid sneaking onto his trampoline, and his interest was only in preventing an incident that might reflect poorly on the company. Nikolai treated his dancers like collectible glass figurines, and it was laughable to imagine he was concerned about anything other than protecting the value of his assets.
“There are people you can talk to if you don’t think you can do it on your own,” Nikolai said. “I can bring someone in to meet with you. No one has to know.”
“I fell, Nikolai,” she said, growing exasperated. “I don’t know what you want me to say. It’s winter. It’s icy. I’m a klutz.”
“You’re not a klutz, Samantha,” he said evenly. “You’re a dancer. And I suggest you start acting like one.” He turned and walked toward the dining hall.
Sam downed her champagne and looked around the room, wondering how she ended up here. Not just at this dinner—it was an unavoidable obligation—but rather Russia of all places. It had seemed like a reasonable idea a year ago, when she was treading water in New York, bouncing between different companies, not really advancing in any measurable way. Moscow: the epicenter of dance, the place that represented a certain kind of glamour in the mind of a twenty-five-year-old girl from the Midwest. A darkening had come upon New York, the city that once sparkled in her mind, and she hoped a change of geography might summon the sun. Yet here she was, on the other side of the world, experiencing no discernible change aside from the color of the clouds.
At eighteen, Sam was offered an apprenticeship with the New York City Ballet. She said goodbye to Chicago, to her family, and settled in Manhattan. She lived in the residence hall, rarely veering from the path between her dorm room and the rehearsal space at Lincoln Center. After a year, she was invited to join the corps de ballet. She advanced quickly within the company, and it was while rehearsing for her first solo role that the unraveling began. She’d been practicing one morning when she felt something tear inside her knee, a jolt of pain that sent her to the ground. A torn meniscus was the diagnosis. The doctor recommended surgery, which left her bedridden for three weeks. It was the longest she’d ever gone without dancing and she couldn’t help but feel as if she’d prematurely arrived at the end of her career. You’ll be back soon enough, people told her, but every day away from the studio diminished her relevance within the company. Her role was given to her understudy, a girl named Abby, who sent a bouquet of flowers and a helium balloon with the words Get Well Soon written in some obnoxiously cheery font. The subtext was clear: Get well soon, but not too soon.
If they offer pills, take them. If they offer more, take those too. Her brother had told her this when he called to check on her after the surgery. She’d taken his advice, both parts, but found she needed more still, despite the doctor’s warning, delivered in a condescending tone, that she use them sparingly, only when necessary. Define necessary. The pain in her knee was
minor compared to the disappointment of losing something she’d been working toward for years. So yes, the pills were necessary, because the pills made her feel better. They were a necessary consolation to counteract the injustice of her injury.
She spent the rest of the summer hobbling around the city on crutches, riding urine-smelling elevators to subway platforms. She met a guy named Atticus at a barbecue hosted by a friend. He arrived on a skateboard, with a backpack full of sweet corn and a cast on his arm, which he’d acquired after attempting to clear the stairs outside a PetSmart. They bonded over their respective disabilities and the pills that kept them afloat. They spent their days together, touring bars, day drinking in parks. Her knee slowly healed, and in time she returned to the studio, carefully testing the limits of her fitness. Her form was slow to return and the progress was frustrating. Her discipline and commitment began to wane. She didn’t lose interest in dance, but she did draw a line between the dance world and her personal life, which began to include all the things she’d sacrificed in her youth. Lincoln Center became her office, and she treated it as such, arriving on time every morning but also leaving promptly at the end of each day. She spent less time with the other dancers, who came to feel more like co-workers, the kind of people with whom the only possible conversation was the one she wasn’t interested in having.
She and Atticus moved in together that fall. She returned home from the studio one afternoon to find him lying on the living room floor with a needle in his arm. She’d thought he was dead at first, but when she began shaking him, he opened his eyes and smiled and said, What a nice surprise.