Color Me Pretty - B. Celeste Page 0,86

attention back.

“We’ll start easy. You look like crap today anyway.” Pointing toward the center of the floor she waved me over and dropped down on the hardwood to begin stretching her legs.

Hesitating, I sat beside her and started mimicking the familiar warmup. We did it in silence for a few minutes, my eyes glancing around the white room that had a lot of natural light from the large windows. There were speakers in each corner and an expensive looking stereo off to the side.

When she said she was ready, she hopped up and rolled her neck before producing a remote from who knew where and turned some music on. It wasn’t what I expected though.

“Hip hop?”

She grinned. “I never said we’d do ballet, did I? This is way more fun. Don’t tell my mother I said that though.”

I made a face. “Do you do this often?”

She snorted. “Yes. Now, quit stalling and watch my feet.” Before I could say anything else, she did an eight-count sidestep, her knees bouncing through each move matching the instrumental in the background until she transferred to a step and tap where her feet went out to the sides on another eight count. I studied her carefully, noticing the slide of her feet in the third move as her hands went out like she was pushing something away.

Shoulders tightening, I got beside her and watched her feet work the moves again. There were three, all on the same count, which made it easier considering I’d been used to the measure. But the moves I used to do were slower, based more on balance and flexibility. I should probably be happy she wasn’t making me do ballet considering I’d barely gotten my balance back from yoga.

When I joined in with her, I managed to mess up the second move and counted wrong on the third one. She snorted when she saw my mistake, standing in front of me and counting my footwork. “No, no. And what are you doing with your arms? You look like they’re tied to your sides.”

I stopped moving and glared. “I’m not used to this. Judith normally—”

“I’m not Judith,” she pointed out. “Come on, it’s not that hard. You need to get into the music. Wait for the next chorus and then start again. Bounce each step and use your hands to clap with every count if you need to. Then, with the second one, stay on your toes instead of flattening your foot. It’ll help you move faster so you don’t go offbeat.” She showed me what she was talking about by giving me a sideview of her sneakered feet.

The second time was better, the three moves melding together even if I was slower than the song. It was when she introduced three more moves that was supposed to build off the first set that had me frustrated over the stiffness in my body. The way she stopped me gave me flashbacks to some of my first dance classes with Judith. That woman was tough—nightmare worthy, even. I remembered some days when I begged my mother not to go because I didn’t want to be yelled at. It was my mother who told me I would be fine because I was a natural.

“Ms. Judith can’t scare you if you don’t let her, sweet Della. You’re made for this.”

It was thirty minutes in when I called a water break and watched as Tiffany moved across the floor to a different song. Unlike me, she faced the mirrors and watched herself, her hips bouncing along, her booty kicking out, and her legs gliding across the hardwood with the squeak of her shoes. She had serious moves and a flawless rhythm down to the music.

I wiped off my mouth. “How long have you been doing this?”

Tiffany turned to face me, wiping off her forehead before shrugging. “A long time. I’ve always been interested in more contemporary dance but was always trained in classical and ballet. My obsession really started after we did Swan Lake. I saw a video online of a hip-hop version. Like a mashup, you know? I thought it looked cool, so I taught myself the steps. I never stopped after that.”

“If you prefer contemporary, why not make the switch? Is it because of your parents?”

Her shoulder lifted. “Partly. It isn’t like I hate ballet, I just feel more in tune with contemporary. It’s like my body feeds from the energy that the moves make. Plus, it’s easier not to pick fights

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