Read Tiny Pretty Things Online

Authors: Sona Charaipotra,Dhonielle Clayton

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Performing Arts, #Dance, #Girls & Women, #Social Issues, #Adolescence

Tiny Pretty Things (15 page)

I take the elevator up to the seventh floor. I knock light at first, then harder. She doesn’t like unplanned visits. If we could schedule our phone calls and rehearse our chats, she’d be even happier. The door opens only a slit. Adele’s sleepy blue eyes stare back at me. Her thick blond hair falls around her shoulders perfectly, like she hasn’t just gotten out of bed. Willowy white legs stand in flawless formation. Even just standing in the hallway in the middle of the night, she’s a model of grace and the perfect ballerina.

“Bette, what is it?” She doesn’t move to the side to let me in. “It’s late. Everyone’s sleeping.” She lives with three other American Ballet Company members.

“Can I come in?” I ask. “It’s only eleven.”

“And tomorrow’s opening night for our
Nutcracker
season. Or did you forget?” Her eyebrow lifts, and she leans forward just like our mother to inspect me.

The fog of Alec’s breakup and losing the Sugar Plum Fairy is distracting me from things I’m supposed to know. I should have company opening nights and closing nights memorized if I want to be part of them one day. I should’ve remembered that she does eight ballets a season as a soloist, so she’s perpetually tired and distracted.

“Your pupils are all dilated.” She reaches a hand for my locket before I can step back. “Chill with these, okay?”

I pull away. I thought my pills were a secret. “With what?”

“You know what I’m talking about. I can tell.”

I’ve never been quite good at lying to my sister. “I’ve just . . . it’s just—I just—”

“Go back to the dorms. Take a hot shower. Until you’re pink. Until you’ve gotten it together. Then call me. Tomorrow.” She closes the door before I can say anything else, and there I am, alone again.

The next day, Mr. K cuts rehearsal short, and if I was the kind of girl that sent thank-you notes, I’d send him one. Being around Alec after the news he dropped on me is too much. So I choose to not deal with it. Instead, I focus on the glitter. It’s all about the glitter. Red lips, eyes lined in purple, glitter on my cheeks, my shoulders, my collarbone, any part of me I want them to look at.

“Whoa,” Eleanor says when she opens the door to our room. I haven’t chosen a dress yet, so I’m mostly naked, except for heels and layers of makeup and my locket.

“Get your ass in gear.” I’m dragging her out tonight for a little fun and distraction. It’s Saturday after all, and normal sixteen-year-olds in New York City would be out.

“Rehearsal sucked, huh?” Eleanor says, stripping off her leotard and tights. Her hair’s still in a bun and I reach over to undo it myself. “Alec joining us?”

I flinch, signaling to her that I don’t want to talk about it. I haven’t told her or Liz anything. I don’t even want to picture his face: his smile full of pity while watching me dance the Snow Queen variation and not the Sugar Plum Fairy, the sound of his whistle after Gigi danced. It’s probably for the best he won’t hook up with me right now. I don’t want someone looking at me like that when we’re kissing, touching, having sex. I’ll just wait until he wants me again. Until he sees I’m still better than everyone else. I think he’s just confused about his feelings right now. Has to be. He’s never danced a
pas
with anyone but me. I’ll forgive him for not knowing what to do. And for us not having our usual amount of time together.

“Just me, you, and Liz tonight,” I say, clipping the words.

“Alec was being too nice to Gigi,” Eleanor starts. “I even saw—”

“We’re not talking rehearsal anymore tonight. Or Alec. And most of all Gigi,” I order. “Get your hair down and your boobs out.”

I’m a little giddy from coffee and pills and all the adrenaline of dancing for the last five hours. Eleanor pulls away from my hands in her hair. It’s a mess of congealed hair spray and sweaty strands, and a shower of bobby pins rains from her scalp to the hardwood floor. We’ve been playing with each other’s hair and helping each other in and out of costumes since we were little girls. There’s really no distinction between her body and my own. Backstage, she’ll help me pull my costumes on and off for quick changes, and I’ve always helped her perfect her makeup.

“You’re cleaning those up.” She gestures to the spilled bobby pins. Already she’s pushing her hair back into a less structured but still painfully tight ponytail. As she pulls it back, her eyebrows rise. Her face is too chubby; the whole thing makes her look fat. “I’ll clean them up while you get ready,” I say.

“I’m tired, and so many parts of my body hurt. Do we have to go out?” Eleanor says, but even as she whines she grabs her towel and turns toward our private bathroom, because she knows I’m not
taking no for an answer. “And is our laundry back?” she asks, like it’s her housekeeper who washes, folds, and delivers our laundry to the front desk every three days. “This is my last towel.”

“Yeah, it came today. Your bag is in your closet.” I riffle in the bright pink laundry bag on my bed. “Found these, too?” I dangle a pair of frilly black panties that are straight out of a lingerie store. “They aren’t mine. Are you hiding something from me, El?”

Her mouth drops open. She grabs at them and starts to stutter out a million reasons why she has something other than cotton underwear. How it’s nothing. How they were a gift.

“You want someone to see those, don’t you?” I say.

She tries to change the subject. “I should just go to bed. So tired.”

“It’s Saturday night. No Pilates tomorrow. We’re going out! You can wear the silver dress.” I take out the shiny minidress I bought over the summer, the one she fell in love with, hanging it on the closet door for maximum effect.

Eleanor walks up to the dress with religious reverence and touches the fabric. An hour later, it’s hugging her body and she doesn’t even look like a ballerina anymore. Eleanor has always been like my own personal Barbie doll. Her mother never taught her all the little tricks of being a girl that my mother taught me, so she lets me take over in that department. When we were twelve, the costume mistress Madame Matvienko pulled her aside and told her to get her act together, that she looked like a slob. She came to me, snotty and crying, asking for my help, and I’ve always been there for her since day one at the conservatory. Tonight she lets me tease her ponytail and line her eyes in the darkest kohl. I purple her lips and drape four long, beaded necklaces over her neck. She’s so tiny under all that makeup and shine and sparkling beads that she practically disappears.

As my mother would say, the dress is wearing her.

My dress is the color of my skin: ivory-white and off the shoulder. Green high heels. Nothing to hide.

I knock on Liz’s door and give it a little push. “Ready?”

It’s dark and smells like a mix of sweaty feet and leotards and vomit. Eleanor says she can’t take it and stays in the hall. Liz is all wrapped up in blankets and not in the dress I told her to wear for tonight. Her roommate, Frankie, isn’t in the bunk bed above her.

“Why aren’t you ready?” I say. “And it smells terrible in here.”

“It’s too cold to go out,” she says, looking up at me with hollowed eyes, wrapping herself tighter, and clicking on her heating pad.

“You sick?” I ask, not wanting to deal with the fact that this is all something else. The sudden weight loss. Well, not so sudden when you think about it. But I don’t want to think about it. At all. And she’s been bragging to me about it. Sending me little texts when she meets her goals.

“Yeah,” she says. “I’m so tired.” I tell her that I’ll bring her some tea. “Stay in bed, okay? You need the night off.”

After delivering Liz’s tea, Eleanor and I take the long route out of the building—down the elevator for a basement visit first. I avoid any talk about Liz. I can’t add another bad thing to think
about to the growing pile in my head.

“Can’t we just go straight outside?” Eleanor complains, already limping in my expensive heels. She tugs at my five-hundred-dollar dress. “We do this every time.”

“This is the best part,” I say. “And I need it, okay?”

The coed student lounge is full—some watch TV, Henri and a few boys play pool, others play air hockey, and Alec strums his guitar in the corner.

Will spots me and sighs loudly, which gets Alec’s attention. I blow Will a kiss. He used to go with me when I went out. It used to be all five of us—Alec, Liz, Will, El, and me—out in a little pack. Now I can’t stand the thought of him out with me. He frowns, looking the same as he did the first day I met him. New kid sobbing outside of the boys’ ballet class after being caught by Mr. K in pointe shoes. I’d consoled him. That reality is so far away.

I bump Henri’s pool cue on purpose when I pass by.

“Pardon,” he says, then steps so close to me I can smell the chocolate he must’ve just eaten.

“Move,” I say. “You’re in my way.”

“No.” His eyes scan me from top to bottom. “You stepped in my way. Made me miss my shot.”

Eleanor grabs my hand. “Let’s go,” she says, trying to pull me away.

I glance back at her, only to see if Alec is watching. And he is, his hand frozen on his guitar, which makes me happy. He still cares. I turn back to Henri. I put a hand on his chest, and push a little. “Are you going to make me stand here all night?” Instead of irritation, I decide to flirt and add a smile, enjoying the whole thing.

“Would that be such a bad thing?” he says, his lilt teasing. “Or maybe you’re going to invite me out with you? Isn’t that what girls like you do?” He takes my hand from his chest and holds it, squeezing it a little, until I snatch it away. I step forward, planning to walk through him. He’s nothing. He’s nobody here. Dancing a
pas
with me will make him something.

“You don’t know anything about me or this place,” I say, loud enough for everyone to hear.

“I’ve seen your type before. Plenty of you at Paris Opera,” he says. “Yes, you’re nothing special. In fact, I know all about you.” He leans close to my ear. “Especially what you did to Cassandra. Pretending to be her friend.”

I snap back and feel my face redden. I give him a look that screams
You don’t know anything.
I hope my face doesn’t betray me, doesn’t reveal that I know what he’s talking about.

Alec walks past us without even stopping, without even seeing if I’m okay. I follow his back with my eyes, not understanding why he didn’t stop to help. Even Eleanor shifts away from us, leaving me cornered by Henri.

“I know a lot, Bette Abney. I know lots of things you probably wouldn’t want me to know. And I plan to prove it. Show everyone who you are.” He lets his fingers graze my collarbone.

“Don’t touch me,” I say.

Does he really know the things I did?

I can’t seem to move.

He laughs. “Your secrets are safe with me,” he says. Then he adds, “Well, maybe not.”

Eleanor bucks up. Finally. She grabs my shaky hand and pulls me away from Henri. In a daze, I let her drag me all the way to the school’s side door entrance. I don’t even put my coat on before we step out into the cold November air.

“What’s wrong?” Eleanor says, but I ignore her, my thoughts haunted by Henri’s accusation, by Cassie and what I did. I sink down to the stoop, my legs weak and wobbly. All I know is, if I’m going down for this, I won’t be alone. We were all in on it together.

Last year, I thought it would be a brilliant idea to get close to Cassie. After all, she’s Alec’s cousin from the Royal Ballet School, here to take on New York, she’d always said with her fake British accent, thinking it was cute. Not just a normal new girl who’d be easy to get rid of. But she was too good, and it got so hard to watch her come in and dance the parts I wanted, the parts I’d been training for at this school since I was five.

In April, I sat along the edges of studio B, watching Cassie’s
pas
run-through for the spring ballet
La Sylphide
with Scott Betancourt, a senior boy likely to be offered an apprenticeship with the company. My mother made sure I got to be there, probably after accusing Mr. Lucas and Mr. K of preferential treatment. She always knew how to throw her weight around in just the right ways.

Scott labored when lifting Cassie over his head that day because she was all clenched up, stomach muscles braced and flinching at his touch.

“Let him hold you,” Morkie had yelled. Cassie tried to adapt. She wasn’t as pretty when she was worried. I tried not to smirk, fought with my lips to stay relaxed. I tried not to enjoy that she wasn’t as good as the teachers always said. That I could’ve been cast. Should’ve been cast. I liked seeing Cassandra’s eyes get all big and watery with confusion and worry.

Morkie clapped her hands in an angry beat along to the music. “Ballet is woman,” she’d hollered, and continued to scold Cassie about letting Scott support her in the flying shoulder lift and hold her low in the hips because she was so tall. “He’s trying to make you look beautiful. But you don’t trust him.”

Will slipped into the studio while Cassie and Scott resumed their battle to dance like soul mates. He’d sat down next to me with a huge smile on his face, and I knew he wanted me to ask. I’d thought about not giving in, but I needed to know what he was doing here. “Why are you in here?”

“Mr. K says I get to understudy this
pas
.” The words tumbled out so fast he was almost screaming them.

“When did that happen? You didn’t tell me.” He was supposed to be one of my best friends. I had expected a text, at least, right after he found out.

“Two days ago,” he said. “I didn’t want to mess it up. Make sure it was for real first.”

“I’m so happy for you,” I said, feeling a knot of jealousy tangle in my stomach. I glanced at the glass wall where Liz stood in the hall, glaring at Cassie, and thought through all of our midnight chats, where Liz, Eleanor, and I plotted to mess with her a little. “Is it all official? The casting?”

“Yup,” he said, pushing down into a deeper stretch.

“Can’t be taken away? Not a ‘let’s see how rehearsal goes’ thing in case you mess up?” I whispered, an idea storming through me.

“Why?” He sat up, and I pulled him closer. We’d spent so much time curled up like this with our secrets and gossip and machinations. I smoothed down a hair sticking up on his head. And I remembered what I loved about him the most: he was solid and thoughtful, and certain. He would always help me.

Other books

El Libro de los Tres by Lloyd Alexander
Corrupt Practices by Robert Rotstein
June in August by Samantha Sommersby
Foolish Expectations by Alison Bliss
Twins Under His Tree by Karen Rose Smith
The Final Line by Kendall McKenna
The Marriage Bargain by Diane Perkins


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024