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Authors: Annabel Joseph

Waking Kiss

BOOK: Waking Kiss
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Waking Kiss

WAKING KISS

Copyright 2013 by Annabel Joseph/Scarlet Rose Press

Cover design by Robin Ludwig Design Inc.

http://www.gobookcoverdesign.com/

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, shared, or distributed in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author except in the case of brief quotation embodied in critical articles and reviews.

This work and its contents are for the sole purpose of fantasy and enjoyment, and not meant to advance or typify any of the activities or lifestyles therein. Please exercise caution in entering into or attempting to imitate any BDSM relationships or activities.

Waking Kiss
by
Annabel Joseph
 

 

 

Note: This novel contains references to childhood abuse and violence which may disturb some readers. If you are struggling with the aftereffects of a past traumatic event, your first course of action should always be to seek the help of a licensed mental health professional, as did the characters in this book.

 

 

You can learn more about mental health services in your area by doing a web search or visiting nimh.nih.gov (U.S. National Institute on Mental Health) or nami.org (National Alliance on Mental Illness).
Chapter One: Act Three
 

Since I was a little girl, I’ve wanted to be invisible. Not in a cool, magical kind of way, but in that way of
please don’t look at me too hard
. Ballet has always been a compulsion for me, not a pleasure. It was something I got serious about because I had to, despite the trauma of being poked and prodded since my most tender years, judged and lambasted because my turnout was weak or my
port de bras
one degree off center. That stuff will drive you nuts, but it’s always been worth it to me, like jumping upstream is worth it to a salmon. It’s a survival thing.

That’s why I really didn’t want to dance center stage with The Great Rubio in our company’s heralded production of
Sleeping Beauty
. I’m not being coy. I’m not pretending I didn’t want to when secretly I would have killed for the chance. No. I really didn’t want to, and it never should have happened in the first place. There was a clause in his contract with the London City Ballet to prevent such a farce.
Mr. Rubio will dance with prima-level ballerinas only. In the event a prima dancer is not available, Mr. Rubio shall not be compelled to perform and a substitution shall be made.

But in this case, Princess Aurora pulled a muscle stretching backstage before her Act Three entrance and I was the only other dancer available with her shade of jet black hair. A stagehand yanked me from the palace set by the back of my ball gown.

“What are you doing?” I asked, pulling it from his grubby fingers.

“Do you know it?” His words didn’t make sense until I saw Mariel, the injured Sleeping Beauty, sobbing a few yards away as a swarm of helpers stripped off her rhinestone-embroidered tutu.

“Do you know it?” He shook me, tugging at the straps of my “Fourteenth Wedding Guest” costume. Of course I knew it. Every corps girl knew the part of Sleeping Beauty from the opening
pas de chats
to the closing
arabesque
. Every one of us had watched Mariel dance it in practice over and over while imagining ourselves in The Great Rubio’s arms. Fernando Rubio was a God to us—capital letter. He was a celebrity recognized by people who weren’t even into ballet, a superstar we’d all been warned not to look at or talk to backstage.

“Yes, I know it,” I said automatically, before I processed what that meant.

Four pairs of hands stripped off my ball gown costume and strong-armed me into Mariel’s ornate white tutu. Oh, okay. Oh.
No.
I couldn’t dance with Rubio, not center stage in front of a packed theater.

“I can’t,” I said in a panic. “I won’t be able to do it. My shoes are too soft.”

They twisted knots in the stretchy clear shoulder straps of the costume since Mariel was taller than me. I tried again. “Uh, really, I can’t do this. My shoes aren’t up to it.”

See, the boxes, or tips, of pointe shoes are constructed of layers of fabric, material, and glue hardened into a molded point. If they’re not broken in, those boxes sound obnoxious on stage, like the clopping of a horse. If they’re very broken in, like mine, they’re nice and quiet but it’s impossible to do demanding pointe work—and Princess Aurora required demanding pointe work.

“My shoes are too soft, you guys.” I think I said it two more times but everyone ignored me. “Why aren’t you listening to me?” I finally cried, waving my hands at the stage manager.

A vein throbbed in his temple. “You’ve got to dance, shoes or not.”

“Then I need to go grab a better pair.”

“You’re on in eight minutes.” He looked around for someone to send but they wouldn’t know which pair I needed. Hell, I didn’t know which pair I needed. I didn’t have a single pair of shoes that would make me good enough to dance with The Great Rubio. “I’ll be back,” I said, darting away.

He trailed me for a second but then he stopped and hissed, “Seven minutes, or else!”

Shit. Shit.
Shit.
I banged through the door into the backstage corridor and barreled toward the dressing rooms. I took the corner so fast I almost slid into the opposite wall. I couldn’t fall down in this five-thousand-dollar tutu, and I definitely couldn’t dance Princess Aurora in these flimsy shoes. I reached the corps dressing rooms and yanked the doorknob to the women’s door. No. Oh God, no.
Locked.

“No, no, no, no,” I pleaded with the universe. “Oh, no. No, no, no.” Every time I said no, I yanked down on the doorknob, like maybe this time it might miraculously open. I turned in a panic. Someone had to have a key, but how long would it take to find that person? Oh God, I was fucked. I was going to have to dance the third act of
Sleeping Beauty
with my idol in the world’s shittiest pointe shoes.

I ran back down the corridor and collided full speed into what felt like a brick wall but was actually a very solid man. “Hey,” he said, catching me. “Where’s the fire?”

“Key.” I shook my hands at him. “Key, key, key, key.
Key!

“I’m sensing you need a key.” His lips tilted into a half smile, and I gave myself a second—no, half a second—to appreciate how handsome he was. Designer suit, long honey-brown hair curling around his shoulders, wide, carved cheekbones and striking amber eyes. He looked thirty-ish or thereabouts, a few years older than me. He had a golden-tan complexion like Rubio, but based on his accent, he was a fellow American. I gave myself another half second to mourn the fact that this guy probably didn’t have a key.

“I need to get into the dressing room,” I cried. “It’s locked.”

“Show me. I’ll open it for you.”

“I need a key.”

“Show me,” he said again.

I took him to the women’s dressing room and rattled the doorknob. “I only have about…I don’t know…five minutes to get back to the wings.”

He eyed my rhinestone-encrusted tutu. “Okay. Stand back.”

For one wild moment I thought he was going to shoulder through the door. He looked strong enough to do it, but what he actually did was bop the doorknob with a quick, smooth movement of his palm. I heard a popping sound. He turned it and held the door open for me.

“Oh my God, oh my God,” I babbled. “How did you do that?”

“It doesn’t always work. It depends on the make of the knob. With this kind of door—”

“No,” I said, cutting him off. “I don’t have time.”

“What can I do to help?”

“I need shoes. New shoes.” I ran over to my carrel, crouched down and pulled out my basket of pointe shoes. I started knocking the toes on the floor, trying to find a pair that was adequately broken in, but they were all too loud and stiff. “I’m screwed,” I wailed. “I can’t believe this is happening to me. These are all too hard.”

He took one in his hand and started kneading it. “Want me to help you soften them?”

I grabbed the shoe back. “No! Oh, God. There’s no time.” I sat in my chair and leaned forward, batting away a faceful of stiff, sequined tutu. “Oh, please. Help me,” I said, trying to reach past the layers of tulle to the ribbons on my ankles. “Help me take these off.”

I was barking orders to a perfect stranger but he complied, kneeling to untie the pink ribbons and unwind them from my ankles while I picked out the pair of shoes that was least noisy. I dug my toe pads out of the discarded pair, wrapped them around my toes, and jammed them into the new pair. He held my tutu down and out of the way while I bent to adjust the elastics and tie the ribbons.

“Hey,” he said over the frantic rasping of my breath. “Everything’s going to be okay.”

“Everything’s not going to be okay,” I snapped. “I’m about to dance
Sleeping Beauty
with The Great Rubio. And listen to this.” I clopped the toes of my shoes on the floor and then kicked my old, soft ones across the room in frustration.


The Great Rubio
?” he repeated, chuckling. I was almost to the door when I realized how rude I’d been to him.

“I only had seven minutes,” I said, turning back. “I’m so sorry. I—”

He waved me off. “Fly free, little ballerina. Go.”

I ran out the door, thinking I should have at least said thank you. It was too late now. The stage manager was a deep shade of scarlet when I skidded up to him. “Damn you,” he said. “You’re on in thirty seconds.”

Grunts attacked my scalp with hairpins as they affixed Princess Aurora’s aluminum and rhinestone crown to my head. At least my black hair would hide the blood.
Ouch.
There had to be blood.

“Shake your head,” the lead costumer barked. The crown didn’t budge. Some woman pushed past him, grabbed my face in one hand and used the other to apply a haphazard slash of the dark red lipstick Sleeping Beauty wore. Out of the corner of my eye I noticed the man from the dressing room observing this chaos. His long, tousled hair contrasted with his sedate expression, his cultivated bearing. He had a great body but he was too big to be a dancer. I wondered why he was hanging out backstage.

“Do your lips.
Do your lips!
” the makeup lady hissed, smacking her own together until I mimicked her, smearing oily crimson in what I hoped was an adequate outline.

Someone tugged at my back, fluffing the tutu. The waist and bodice fit like a second skin. Apparently Mariel and I were the same size in the middle if not in height, and in fact we looked very much alike, with pale complexions, black hair, and blue eyes. Only difference was that she was a principal who’d danced this role for weeks now, and I was a faceless member of the corps. Also, my shoes weren’t broken in and I was about to possibly have a heart attack.

I looked around for my lock-breaking hero but he’d disappeared again. “Just get through it, Ashleigh,” said a low voice at my side. The company director, Yves Thibault. Mr. Thibault was a great director because he understood his dancers. For instance, he understood that I danced best in a group, at the back of the stage out of the spotlight. I appealed silently for him to intervene and save me, perhaps by canceling the rest of the ballet or delaying it until another principal ballerina could be fetched.

It wasn’t happening.

Rubio stretched on the other side of the stage, oblivious to the drama, deep in performance mode. He wasn’t called The Great Rubio for nothing. Such focus, such artistic brilliance—and the body of a Brazilian Adonis. The twenty-six-year-old
virtuoso
had risen from the slums of Rio to the top of the ballet world on pure, glorious talent. Me, I’d scratched my way into the London City Ballet corps and that was probably as far as I’d ever go.

BOOK: Waking Kiss
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