Blood
and sweat. Bethany Lewis danced her way out of poverty. She’s a
world class athlete… with a debt to pay.
Joshua
North always gets what he wants. And the mercenary wants Bethany in
his bed. He wants her beautiful little body bent to his will.
She
doesn’t surrender to his kiss.
He
doesn’t back down from a challenge.
It’s
going to be a sensual fight… to the death.
Excerpt
Blinding
lights. Aching lungs. Thunderous applause. The final show concludes
the same way we rehearsed for months, the same way we performed for
weeks. My muscles know the movements better than they understand
rest. The prospect of after, of what comes next, makes my breath
catch. Even as the primas take their bows, relief echoes around the
stage. Vacations are planned. Relief for strained muscles. Everyone
needs a break, even professional athletes. I’m the only one onstage
dreading it.
We
bow and curtsy with practiced grace. The curtain descends to the
floor. Almost to the second we break formation—a flock of crows
startled from the woods. The more exuberant among us, the young ones,
the new ones, the ones using steroids, prance and jeté toward the
dressing rooms. Most of us limp our way out. One hundred percent of
NFL players are injured every season. Professional dancing is the
same. We hurl our bodies through the air, forcing massive impact
through tired joints night after night. I catch my friend Marlena in
my arms. Her face is white with pain.
“Ice,”
she says. “Or better yet—tequila.”
I
push my shoulder under hers as we exit the stage. “Don’t sell
yourself short. You can have both.”
A
delicate snort. “Not likely. We have to smile and flirt with the
old men with big, fat wallets. And for what? I won’t be here next
season. You won’t be, either.”
The
reminder clangs inside me like a copper bell. I won’t be coming to
the New York City Ballet after the break. We fall into our creaky
chairs in the dressing room. “Are you going to miss it?”
“Miss
it? Of course I’ll miss it.” Marlena turned twenty-eight last
month. It’s comfortably retirement age for a dancer. “When the
little children do their terrible pirouettes, when they sneeze and
throw up and cry all over my leotard, I’ll think fondly of the
beautiful art I left behind. Then I’ll be able to walk home. That
won’t happen if I try to dance another season.”
“You’ll
make a wonderful teacher. You know you were mine.” She didn’t
teach me to dance. It was my first love, before I learned to flip and
contort myself. Before I ever leapt from a trapeze bar.
Marlena
taught me the ropes of the ballet company when I joined two years
ago. Most of them thought I wouldn’t last a week. Some of them
didn’t want me to. It’s a rigid world, the hierarchy stacked with
graduates of Juilliard or the John Cranko school.
I
don’t have a pedigree.
All
I have is a body that does what it must, no matter how much it hurts.
Which
means changing out of my sweaty leotard into a fresh one. We’re
contractually obligated to attend the ball. Like Marlena said, we
should smile and flirt with the high society people who attend. Both
the male and female dancers have to do it. It’s what convinces the
sponsors to write checks that will fund the next season. By the time
they’re rehearsing The Nutcracker I’ll be in New Orleans, the
place I swore I’d never return.
About
the Author
Skye
Warren is the New York Times bestselling author of dangerous romance.
Her books have sold over one million copies. She makes her home in
Texas with her loving family, sweet dogs, and evil cat.
Buy
Links
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Skye
Warren will be awarding a $15 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn
winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
3 comments:
Thanks for hosting!
Welcome to Beyond Romance, Skye!
I absolutely loved this excerpt. You so vividly capture the reality of being a ballerina. This is going on my to-read list.
I like the cover.
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