Authors: Lisi Harrison
Heidi thrust out her boobs while her back arched in protest.
Note to self
, Skye thought.
Introduce H to the new line of Martha Graham bust-minimizer tops. Give her the friends-and-family discount if she balks
.
Next to her, Becca spiked up into a high, athletic half split that was about two centimeters short of a cheerleader hurkey.
Skye pulled Becca’s ponytail down to stop her overzealous bobbing. “Less bounce, more weight.”
Becca sucked in her already concave stomach on hearing the word
weight
. Skye sighed. Becca wasn’t the brightest beta on the barre, but she was sweeter than Splenda and shadowed Skye with the dedication
of a choral swan in
Swan Lake
. Those who can’t lead follow. And as long as they followed Skye, everything was perfect.
Next, she circled Missy. Each strand of her hair was in place, just like her steps. She strung together the exquisite sequences
with technical perfection: Her toe was pointed at a forty-five-degree angle, her shoulders parallel to the floor, and her
leaps timed to a millisecond of the driving beat. But she was full of more lead than a Chinese toy.
The song ended and the dancers stopped. Missy blinked up at her friend, eagerly awaiting her notes. It was like a sadist’s
Hallmark card; when you care enough to be insulted by the very best.
“Watch me.” Skye launched into a perfect piqué turn, arms wide, hands clasped, as if hugging Kevin Fat-erline. “You want to
be solid and liquid at the same time, like an unopened juice box on a whirling merry-go-round,” she instructed, borrowing
a line from her mother and passing it off as her own.
One… two… three…
After the third revolution, the door creaked open and Madame P glided back in.
On the fourth turn, Skye saw her parents, dressed in matching gray-and-white
après
-dance warm-ups, her mother waving a piece of gold paper over her head.
And on the fifth—wait, was that a
camera crew
? Skye slowed, then settled on the balls of her feet. Lithe waitresses dressed in white BADS unitards and silver tutus wheeled
in tray after tray of dim sum followed by Skye’s favorite cake, Payard’s
pont neuf
. It was a veritable port-a-party.
But why?
Food was never allowed in the studio. Or in the dancers, for that matter.
Missy and Leslie widened their glitter-dusted eyes at Skye, who shrugged in return.
“Congratulations, my darling!” Natasha Hamilton shouted in her faint Russian accent. Her moonlit whitish-blond hair was clipped
in a low ponytail. But the rest of her moved with uninhibited joy. She waved a gold-glittered envelope in the air. “You have
been accepted to Alpha Academy!”
The back eight squealed in envy-delight.
“
What
?” Skye’s Tiffany box blue eyes searched her mom’s identical ones for an explanation. A retraction. A punch line.
But the pride on her mother’s face was as genuine as it was rare.
The last time Skye had seen it was seven years ago, when she’d told her mother she wanted to become a professional ballerina,
just like her. Months later the studio had been built, instructors had been imported, and training had begun. But no matter
how hard Skye danced for it, that proud expression had never returned. Until now.
Eccentric billionaire entertainment mogul Shira Brazille had announced the school’s opening on her show,
The Brazille Hour
, last spring, and Skye had been desperate to attend ever since. The Aussie expat had founded the exclusive boarding school
to nurture the next generation of exceptional dancers, writers, artists, and inventors because she was—in her and everyone
else’s estimation—the final word in all things alpha. CEO of AlphaGirl International, acclaimed entrepreneur, fashion guru,
Shira was
everywhere
. She was more respected than Martha, more revered than Michelle, and more liked than Oprah.
Skye threw up her arms and spun in a perfect pirouette. “I’m in!” She tapped her toe on the floor, her breath catching in
her throat. This was it. Her big break. The gateway to more stages, more solos, more standing ovations, more proud expressions,
more chances to be at the center of everything.
A brunette reporter with a chin-butt that rivaled Demi Lovato’s stood in front of a one-man camera crew. She forced a wide
grin on her powder pink lips. “This is Winkie Porter from Westchester News 1, reporting from Body Alive Dance Studio in Westchester,
New York?” Winkie’s voice went up at the end of every sentence, making even her name sound like a question. “Eccentric billionaire
entertainment mogul Shira Brazille announced the opening of Alpha Academy last spring to, and I quote, ‘nurture the next generation
of exceptional talent without distractions from our mediocre world.’ And our very own fourteen-year-old Skye Hamilton, dance
wunderkind, is one of the lucky one hundred to secure a coveted spot!”
“You did it, Skye-High!” Her dad scooped her up into a lift, and she giggled on the way down. Even though she landed perfectly,
she still felt like she was floating.
“Are we getting this?” Winkie asked her stubbly-but-cute camera guy. When he shook his head no, she said, “Mr. Hamilton, could
you do that again?”
The dancers scuttled behind Skye and her father in an attempt to get on camera. They moved in a tight tangle, like a clump
of hair coasting toward the shower drain.
Skye shrugged and nodded at her dad, whose hazel eyes moistened with pride as he whirled her again. He set her down gently,
his full head of dark blond hair slightly tousled from the spinning. She patted it down like he was her very large obedient
poodle.
“Did you ever think your daughter would be sought after by the most influential woman in the world?” Winkie stuck a microphone
under his strong chin.
“Of course.” Geoffrey smiled at his daughter.
Winkie rested her frosty hand on Skye’s shoulder. “We heard there was a little mishap with your essay and that it was lost
in the mail. Did you stay up all night rewriting? Take us through your ordeal.”
Skye adjusted her sleeves. How did Winkie know about that?
She’d had received word that the essay portion of her application has been misplaced last month, but hadn’t bothered to write
another. She’d been too busy pursuing her other favorite pastime: boys. Skye had been hoping to discover whether surfer hawttie
Dune Baxter’s lips tasted like saltwater taffy, but he’d turned out to be interested in eighth grader Kristen Gregory, instead.
“It was really stressful,” Skye lied. “Let’s just say I have calluses on my hands to match the ones on my feet.”
Winkie laughed with her mouth closed.
Behind the camera, old instructors, school friends, and neighbors were starting to arrive. Greeting one another with hugs,
they stuffed dumplings in their mouths and then chew-nodded their delight in this local success story.
Winkie stuck a microphone under Skye’s barely glossed lips. “Tell us how it feels to be chosen by Shira Brazille, entertainment
mogul. Icon. Alpha.”
Skye reached up and pulled a silver chopstick from her artful bird’s nest, releasing a cascade of blond wavelets for the camera.
“Shira’s a real hero of mine,” she said confidently. “Her outback-to-riches story is such an inspiration. It shows what a
girl can do when she applies herself. And now to give back in this way—wow!” Skye inflected as if all this had just occurred
to her and she hadn’t practiced a million times with her mother over the summer before the essay was lost.
“And for those of us unfamiliar with the term, what exactly is an ‘alpha’?” Winkie asked through her pasted-on smile, air-quoting
with her microphone-free hand.
“If you have to ask, then you’ll never know.” Skye didn’t have an edit button. Girls like her didn’t need one.
Winkie’s eye twitched but she moved effortlessly onto the next topic. “Skye, you are the only girl chosen from New York state.
Are you nervous about no longer being a big fish in a small pond? Do you feel ready to leave this all behind?” She licked
her lips, as if she’d hit her Barbara Walters cry-inducing question.
Was Skye ready? She looked around at BADS, where she was the best dancer they’d ever had, and at the DSL Daters, who had been
nothing more than well-dressed Nutcrackers before she brought them to life. Skye pinched her mini lips charm between her thumb
and pinkie. She’d already kissed all the Best Westies (Westchester boys). She’d always suspected she was destined for bigger
things.
Natasha’s bony fingers reached for her daughter’s hand. A cue to return to the script. “My mom taught me that success is like
ballet. You work until your feet hurt, until your muscles ache, until your body knows the steps without thinking. You challenge
yourself every day to dance harder, better, longer. So when the lights come on and the performance begins, it looks effortless.
”
Her mom’s round mouth and full lips moved along with her own. After a career full of interviews and TV appearances, Natasha
always knew what to say. But Skye could never put her feelings into words. She was the type who had to get on her feet and
show them.
“Well, you’re certainly ready.” Winkie’s voice didn’t go up that time—there was no question about it.
“Thanks for the party, Mom.” Skye followed Natasha to a pair of chairs in the corner once everyone had gone. “And for rewriting
my essay.”
“I didn’t write it.” Natasha crunched down on a piece of celery. “I added a few lines here and there, but you did most of
the work.”
Skye studied her mother’s pronounced jaw. It was pulsing from chewing, not tension. She lifted a silver box out from under
her chair.
“Hmmmm.” Skye looked up at the track lights. Maybe the essay had been found after all? Or maybe when the Alpha Academy admissions
committee saw her video audition, they realized she didn’t need one?
Natasha handed her daughter the box and Skye slowly untied the white bow.
She lifted a lavender toe shoe from the tissue paper, its worn silver satin ribbons trailing behind like smoke from a blown-out
candle. The pair had hung over her mother’s vanity forever. Like stamps on a passport, the scuffs, scrapes, and frayed silk
told the story of her mom’s career: from
Swan Lake
at the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg,
Coppélia
at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris, and
Sleeping Beauty
at the Royal Opera House in London, where a grand jeté gone wrong had landed her in King’s College Hospital with a torn meniscus
and a fractured career.
“They’re too big for me,” Skye said, hoping for a new pair. Maybe something in a soft gold. “Besides…” She searched the box
for the other shoe, but the tissue was empty. “There’s only one.” Skye furrowed her brow, not sure what she was supposed to
do with one big used shoe.
“This slipper is special,” Natasha whispered. “It will fit your hads.”
“Huh?” Skye blinked. Her mom had been in the country for eighteen years, but every once in a while something got lost in translation.
“It will fit your HADs,” Natasha repeated. “Your Hopes And Dreams.” She flipped open the tip of the shoe. “You write what
you wish for for and hide it in the shoe. When the time is right, it comes true.”
“Really?” Skye leaned in closer. “What did you wish for?”
“Meeting your father,” Natasha mused, untucking Skye’s hair from behind her ears. Skye knew the story well. Her mom—the original
DSL Dater—had come to America when she was seventeen to perform at Lincoln Center. After one dance onstage, she’d landed a
marriage proposal from Skye’s dad and defected. “This dance studio,” Natasha continued. “And you.”
Her mother’s words filled her muscles with the kind of warmth that comes after a good stretch. They softened and strengthened
her at the same time. Who cared how her application had landed on Shira’s desk? All that mattered was that it had.
Skye glanced around at the place she’d learned to dance, suddenly feeling too big for the small studio. The leaded windows,
the track lighting with special bulbs that flattered blondes, the nick in the doorjamb where she’d spun and whacked the frame
with her Tinker Bell wand when she was six. They were part of her past now, destined to shrink into wallet-size snapshots
in her memory. Images that she’d flip through when she needed to remember where she came from.
Weaving the shoe’s silk straps through her fingers, Skye glanced at her mom’s cheekbones. Her pale skin covered them like
white tights over smooth stones when she smiled.
“You will be the best dancer at Alpha Academy.” Her mother pulled her to her heart, like their hug was choreographed. The
jingle of charms made her homesick even though she was still there. “What are you going to wish for first?
Skye opened the secret compartment, discovering neatly folded squares of blank, lavender-scented paper. They smelled like
home.
“I dunno,” Skye lied. The truth was, she knew exactly what she wanted. She had hoped and dreamed for it her entire life.
HAD No. 1 was to make her mother proud.
At thirty-eight thousand feet above the desert, Allie Abbott tried to GPS her emotional state. It was somewhere between
wow
and
whoa, what have I done!?
Her emerald-colored contact lenses flitted around the womblike belly of the personal private plane. After two-plus hours
of flying and crying, her eyes were finally dry enough to take in their surroundings.
Hammered silver coated the convex egg-shaped walls, reflecting prisms and rainbows all over the cabin.
“I’m made from sixty thousand recycled aluminum cans,” the wall announced in a woman’s warm British accent when she ran her
fingers over its warped surface.
She Purelled immediately.
Still, Allie never would have known that she was flying “green” if the plane’s automated voice didn’t remind her every time
she touched anything. She sank into her womblike recliner made from recycled tires. Allie liked that everything on the plane
used to be something else—everything here had a fresh start, a second chance, and now, thanks to Alpha Academy, so did Allie.
She took a sip of wheatgrass lemonade, Allie J’s favorite.