Authors: Marcia Talley
Ruth paled. âI couldn't. I'm not ready.'
Kay rose from her chair and laid a comforting hand on Ruth's shoulder. âYes you can, and we can help you. If you agree to this, Jay will coach you privately, twice a week. Then, we'll put you together with Hutch, and work up a dynamite routine.'
âJesus.' Ruth said.
Hutch, who had been slumped in his chair like Raggedy Andy, suddenly came to life. âI'm game if you are, sweetheart.'
Ruth wagged her head. âThis is all too sudden, I can't even think.'
âHow much will it cost?' I asked, remembering my promise to help Ruth keep her head.
âCost?' Jay puffed air out of his lips, as if I'd insulted him. âAbsolutely nothing.'
Kay smiled benevolently. âIf you make it through the auditions and get on to the show, it will be a priceless advertisement for J & K. That is our payback. That is our hope.'
Hutch stood up, took Ruth's hand, and pulled her to her feet. âThis is all very flattering, of course, and exciting. But, it's been a long day, and I think we'll need to sleep on it.'
âThank you,' Ruth tossed over her shoulder as Hutch put his arm around her and led her out the door.
Paul and I said our goodbyes, and followed them out to the coat rack.
As Paul held my coat and I eased my arms into the sleeves, I heard Ruth say, âSomebody had better tell me what to do.'
A
s I thought about the weeks afterward, I found that I tended to identify them by the dances we studied.
The first, Waltz Week, was all about Ruth, waltzing as we were to her tune.
Cha-cha Week, the fourth one after Thanksgiving, found me multitasking â Christmas shopping, decorating, cooking, cleaning and babysitting for my grandkids while Emily and Dante managed pre-Christmas promotionals designed to lure new members into Spa Paradiso.
A year's membership? The perfect gift.
Gained weight during the holidays? Get rid of it, fast. New Year's resolution to get back into shape? Our trainers can help.
Rumba Week began normally enough until the
Shall We Dance?
bombshell exploded at our feet. The next day, Tuesday, not long before Christmas, I telephoned Ruth several times to find out what she'd decided, but her assistant at Mother Earth told me Ruth was out.
At four fifty, I dropped Chloe off at J & K for her ballet lesson and got the answer to my question. When Chloe and I walked in, Ruth was totally wrapped up in a private lesson with Jay who was wearing his trademark black pants and a maroon shirt like a second skin. I hung Chloe's coat on a hook near the door, and the two of us stood on the sidelines watching.
Chloe tugged on the hem of my sweater. âThat's Aunt Ruth.'
âIndeed, it is.'
âShe's doing the rumba,' Chloe informed me sagely.
âThat's true, too.' If the steps hadn't been a dead give-away, Ruth was the complete rumba picture, down to green tights under a kicky miniskirt with a beaded hem that flicked around her thighs as she moved.
We watched for a while as Chloe's classmates began to arrive for ballet.
âI want to learn ballroom,' Chloe said. âI want to be on TV.'
My god, I thought, does everyone want to be on TV?
âCan't you be on TV dancing ballet?' I asked my granddaughter.
Chloe turned her wide, bright eyes on me. âNooooh,' she said. Rough translation:
Duh
,
Grandma
. âMy teacher says ballet is excellent preparation for ballroom dancing.'
âIt is?'
âUh huh. You learn to do lifts and things, like on TV.'
âBut don't you need a partner for ballroom, Chloe?'
âUh huh.'
âDo you know any boys who like to dance?'
Chloe's chin nearly touched her chest. âNuh uh. Boys think dancing is gross. They have to, like, touch hands!'
While I was trying to come up with some words of wisdom to reassure my granddaughter that as hard as it was to believe, someday boys wouldn't mind touching hands with her, Chloe turned to me and announced, âTessa is taking ballroom dancing lessons.' She rose on tiptoe, whispered in my ear. âThey're private.'
Chloe's hand shot out, index finger extended. She was pointing to the women's dressing room from which a munchkin of a girl was just emerging. She had cascades of ebony curls drawn up into a high ponytail and fastened at the crown of her head with a pink carnation. She wore a pink leotard and matching tights, and pink ballet slippers. I squinted, not quite believing my eyes. And lipstick?
âTessa has pink leotards, and blue ones, and yellow ones, too. I want purple leotards for Christmas, Grandma.'
âHave you talked to Santa about that?'
Chloe nodded. âCan I ask you something, Grandma?'
âSure.'
âIs there really a Santa Claus?'
âWhat do you think, Chloe?'
âI don't know. Mommy says that if you don't believe in him, Santa won't come.'
Chloe's normally smooth brow wrinkled in concentration. âI want a purple tutu, too.'
âThen I think you should write to Santa about that.'
âOK,' she agreed. âBut if Santa doesn't bring me purple leotards this year, that's it. I'll never trust him again. And I'll tell Jake and Timmy not to believe in him either!'
The ultimate threat. Exposure! Poor Santa.
The rest of Chloe's little classmates began arriving, hanging up coats, flitting in and out of the dressing room, scurrying over to the barre preparing to exercise. A woman I took to be Tessa's mother fussed over her daughter's hair for a moment, then shoved the girl in the direction of the barre with the flat of a hand placed squarely on the child's back. Chloe and I watched as Tessa raised her left leg, rested it on the barre, then slowly lowered her head until it touched her knee, as easily as a contortionist from
Cirque de Soleil
. Little show-off.
Chloe noticed me watching. âI can do that, Grandma.'
âYou can? Show me.'
Chloe skipped over to the barre, her golden hair flopping. Using both hands, she lifted her leg to the barre, then lowered her head a few inches, missing her knee by a mile. She turned her head slowly toward me, a grin splitting her face.
I clapped my hands silently.
âShe's got to keep her leg perfectly straight,' somebody behind me whined.
I turned to the speaker. Tessa's mother.
âDo you mean Chloe?'
âGoodness, no, Chloe's just a beginner. I mean Tessa. If I've told her once, I've told her a thousand times.'
âHow old is Tessa? Ten?'
âNine.'
âPlenty of time for her to practice, then.'
Tessa's mother stared at me as if I'd just told her that President Bush had declared the War on Terror a terrible mistake, and ordered all our troops home from Iraq. âFor Chloe, maybe, but Tessa is trying out for
Tiny Ballroom
.'
I'd actually seen promos for
Tiny Ballroom
, an American spin-off of a popular British show featuring eight to eleven-year-old dancers that would make its debut on cable TV in the US this coming summer. When I first saw the ads, I cringed, having a major JonBenet Ramsey moment. âBallroom? I thought we were talking about ballet?'
âTessa's been studying ballet since she was five. She's been taking ballroom privately from Alicia for about a year. We're stepping it up a bit, because the
Tiny Ballroom
auditions are in three months.'
I watched as Tessa, Chloe and several other girls began their barre exercises. âWho's Tessa's partner, then?'
âOh my god, was
that
a production! When Joey retired, we had to put an ad in the paper. That's how we found Henry. Tessa dances with him twice a week after school. He's ten.'
âTessa's partner
retired
? At ten?' I was glad this woman wasn't my mother.
âEleven. Apparently Joey preferred playing Little League.' She sniffed, as if the child had declared himself a conscientious objector.
âTessa must like dancing,' I said.
âLoves it! Tessa's a self-starter. She practices all the time. Link's built a studio for her in the garage, fully-equipped. We'd schedule lessons three times a week, but Alicia's only free on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, and Henry has to be with his dad on Saturday. So Saturday Tessa does tap.'
I watched Tessa exercise and wondered if the little girl ever slept. But then, I didn't suppose her schedule was any more taxing than that of any Little League or Youth Soccer fanatic. I pictured Henry as a serious kid with wire-rimmed glasses; a child of divorce, struggling to please. I wondered if he had a life, either.
Tessa spun away from the barre in a series of spot spins that made me dizzy just watching. She staggered to a halt in front of her mother. âWhat do you think about that? Good, huh?'
I hated seeing a little girl sweat.
Before her mother could answer, Alicia appeared, clapped her hands and said, âC'mon little sugarplum fairies! Time for your exercises!'
Ten little figures scrambled to the barre, rested their left hands lightly upon it, lined up like sparrows on a telephone wire. âPosition one!' Alicia shouted as the music began. âPlié. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.'
âThat's so sad.'
Tessa's mother couldn't have been talking about the barre exercise. âWhat's sad?' I asked.
âTessa was going to dance a sugarplum fairy in
The Nutcracker
this year, but Annapolis Ballet Theater decided to team up with another studio. Idiots! Tessa was
so
disappointed.'
âDemi plié!' cried Alicia. âOne, two . . .'
Across the room, Tessa raised a graceful arm and bent her knees, stealing a moment to glance at her mother who nodded in approval.
âI was disappointed, too,' Tessa's mom continued. âI even considered taking Tessa out of class, but in the end, I just couldn't do it. I've always been loyal to Jay and Kay.' She turned to me and beamed. âBut it's just as well, isn't it, because now there's nothing to conflict with preparing Tessa and Henry for
Tiny Ballroom
!'
âI guess not,' I said, disliking the woman intensely. I'd taken dancing lessons as a kid, too, but prancing around the Rec Center â step, together, step, kick â to the Beatles' âYellow Submarine' at one dollar a lesson was just plain fun. Nobody expected to turn me into Ginger Rogers. And when I said I'd rather swim, please, my parents just smiled and said, sure, no problem. Maybe if they'd cajoled and wheedled and bribed me a bit, I'd have been just as accomplished as Tessa at nine.
But without the fake tan and hair extensions.
âIf you'll excuse me, now,' I said, âI need to go powder my nose.'
It wasn't until I got into the dressing room, and locked the door of the toilet stall behind me, that I realized I never asked Tessa's mother her name.
But, since I never planned to talk to her again if I could help it, what did it matter?
F
our days before Christmas, Ruth left a message on my cell, asking if I'd stop by J & K to critique the routine she and Hutch had been practicing for
Shall We Dance?
Paul was working late at the Academy, getting finals marked and end of semester grades turned in to the academic dean, so I thought, why not.
On the way, I braved the icy roads, stopped off at Graul's Market to buy a pound of coffee and a pint of half and half, so I got to J & K a little late, only to discover that Hutch had beaten both me and Ruth to the studio. âHow's it going, Hutch?' I asked, peeling off my hat, gloves and scarf as I entered the studio and the air enveloped me in a superheated wave.
Hutch tapped his watch, as if it might be broken. âRuth's late, and she didn't call. With the icy roads and all, I'm a little worried.'
I shrugged out of my coat. âShe's probably delayed in traffic.' I hoped I sounded more reassuring than I felt. In point of fact, Ruth would be coming from downtown and using the same roads I had, and there had been absolutely no traffic problems for me. âShe'll be along.'
âI tried her cell phone,' Hutch said, âbut it goes straight to her voicemail.'
Now that was odd. Ruth never turned her cell phone off. By the worried look on Hutch's face, I realized he knew that, too. âMaybe the battery died,' I suggested.
âMaybe.' But he didn't sound convinced.
âAre Jay and Kay here?'
âNo. We're working with them tomorrow. Just Chance.'
âLet's sit down,' I suggested, casting about wildly for ways to distract the man. âThere's something I've been meaning to ask you.' We settled ourselves comfortably on one of the spectator benches, then I patted Hutch's knee and said, âSo, truth or consequences. Where are you taking Ruth on your honeymoon?'
Hutch brightened. âI'm not sure if I'm supposed to tell.'
âRuth's been a bit cagey, but she's got everything else organized within an inch of its life, so I figured the honeymoon was laid on, too.'
âI'll give you a hint, Hannah. It's warmer than Annapolis in the wintertime.'
âSurprise, surprise, surprise!'
âIf you won't tell Ruth that I spilled the beans . . .'
I pantomimed locking my lips and throwing away the key.
âWe're booked into a resort called Maya Tulum on the Yucatan peninsula. Alicia taught yoga there and recommends it highly. Alicia says it's perfect for us, a modern resort, but with New Age sensitivities. Eco tours, beach front cabanas, vegetarian cuisine, the whole mind-body-spirit sort of thing.
âSounds very Ruth,' I said sincerely. Ruth would love it.
âIt is.' Hutch hopped to his feet. âSo, where the hell is she?'
âCar trouble?' I offered, hopefully. Ruth drove a clunker, a battered green Ford circa 1990. âI didn't see her Taurus in the lot.'